ygAJOR-GENERAL JAAFAR EL-NUMEIRY, who \ as overthrown as
President of the Sudan in Monday’s coup, was back in control last
ight. according to Omdurman Radio. The successful counter-coup
allowed the forcing down of a B O A C VC-10 in Lilia early yesterday
nd the seizure of the new president. Lt.-Col. Babikr Al-Noor, who was
lying homo from London. \
The pilot was told the plane, with 109 passengers, mostly British,
'ould be shot down unless he landed at Benina airpon, Benghazi. After
le landing. Col Al-Noor and his second in command, Major Hamadullah,
ad a brief talk with their Libyan kidnappers who had dome aboard, and
— then agreed to sur-
ABOARD THE HIJACKED VC10
x tb- w gers”7
' Land now or we b^K"
V C-10, days that the order to
« JL _ m _ _ _ ^Jf ^ _ __ } land was radioed to the air-
SflOOt YOU UOWtl liner by air traffic control at
a/ Benghazi airport, soon after
they had entered Libyan air
By BRIAN SILK who teas flying to Khartoum with Lt space. A iibyan Air Force
. Col Al-Noor and Major Uamadallak who were j e t fighter took up position
arrested by Libyan security men. on the V C-lG’s taiL
PHE leader of the Sudan coup, Lt.-Col. Babikr
Al-Noor, and his second-in-command,
_ lajor Farouk Osmana Hamadallah, were still
•eing held prisoners in Libya last night after
saw them kidnapped from a B 0 A C VC-10 air-
men
They were taken from the plane early yesterday
toming after it bad been forced to land at Benghazi
nder threat of being shot down by Libyan fighters.
.’here were 109 pas- _ ,
engers, most of them ■
British, aboard the air- ;
craft, which was travel- . Jf •
ling from London to M ■ fjjk
Khartoum. m. di iJkJm -
■ ■£&'
■ rw*s.t
Many of the passengers, ^
who included 26 children,
slept through the 90-minute j*^*S9*t
irama at Benina Airport, • y*
The two Sudanese officers -wrwfc < 1 *
iflered their captors no resist-
ance in return " for the safety ■ ■ ‘
of the aircraft and the other ■
Lt-Col Al-Noor said be was lra|
Being taken as a hostage to force WzW ffMw '
he reinstatement of the deposed ^
Jupanese President Jaafar £1-
Simeiry. Brian Silk.
Following orders from B 0 A C
leadquarters, Capt. Koy Bowyer, Secretarv at the British Embassy
he plane's captain, flew his | ^ Khartoum, and his wife,
tassengers back to__ London, ^ «, m pr 2 encv besan in the
Brian Silk.
ibantionin.
ihartoum.
in Khartoum, and his wife.
The emergency began in the
cabin as the radio came to life
render “ for the safety
of plane and passen-
gers.” x
Brian | Silk, the only
British reporter aboard the
V C-10, days that the order to
land was radioed to the air-
liner by air traffic control at
Benghaa airport, soon after
they had entered Libyan air
space. A Libyan Air Force
jet fighter Itook up position
on the V C-lO’s taiL
Capt. Roy Bowyer, the pilot,
at first refused to land, say-
ing: “I shall return to Rome
or Malta.” Back came the
command “Land at Benina
or we shall shoot you down.”
The British Government has
condemned the forcing down of
the VC-10 as “ inexcusable ”
and ** outrageous,” Mr Godber.
Minister of State for Foreign
Affairs, said in the Commons.
In last night’s counter coup,
Forces loyal to President Numeiry
seized Khartoum radio station
from troops supporting the
three-day-old Left-wing military
regime, Omdurman Radio said.
A state of emergency was
declared throughout the Sudan,
and a 6 p.m. curfew imposed.
A number oC Iraqi politicians
w'ere killed as their plane
crashed while on their way Id
Khartoum to congratulate the
leader: oF Monday's coup.
Other Libyan News and
Pictures — P4 and Back Page
Editorial Comment — PI 4
NUMEIRY IN
COMMAND
By JOHN BULLOCH
in Cairo
AT AJOR-GENERAL Jaafar
A A Numeiry. deposed two
days ago as head of state
of the Sudan, was back in
the Presidential palace in
Khartoum last night.
Junior Array officers led a
303 rd the BO A C VC-10 with
*11 the calm and dignity oF the
nod el officer. He offered no re-
or' Malta.”
Back came the command:
“ Land at Benina or we shall
node! officer, ne onereo no >«=- r QU down.’* aan occupieo me lawo M « UU u.
istance. explaining that he shoot >ou oo Then, after martial music.
• anted to ensure the “safety Faced with this threat. Cant. Major Salah Abdel Aal came
►f the aircraft and the other Bowyer did not hesitate. _ nr on t he ^ to say that Lhe trial
lassengers.”
between the Sudan and the out-
side world, announced that loyal
forces led bv Major Ali Kirbasi
had occupied the radio station.
Then, after martial music.
the aircraft and the other Bowyer did not hesitate. He on t he air to say that Lhe trial
told the Libyans he would land of ^ e past 48 hours was over.
,1 at Benina after he had burned Gen _ Numeiry. ousted as
“ ReadV to die ' sufficient fuel to obtain landing j esrIer j, y a Communist-sup-
* . . weight. ported clique of extremist offi-
Before he was led auavoy ms chief Steward Geoffrev Harris cers. would resume his post. He
v..,, L'lHnanhPPC V.n 1. nr . . ... tr . l ,fi.. ki,
Libyan* kidnapper.. Col- AI-
> T oor declared: “This will not
;top the revolution in the
Then he and Major Hama-
came into the first-class com-
partment and shook the Sudan-
ese leader by the shoulder to
wake him. He showed him a
was in good health after his cap-
tivity in Khartoum military
headquarters, said Major AaL
Then came another, tougher.
Then He anu .Via JUl noma- wake Dim. He suuncu mui “ lame -
lallah. were marched across radio message, whispered some- voice. This time it was Major
TSannni'c Reruna .uinn in hit ear and then lea Abau kassem I bra rum. who
ie tarmac at Bengazi’s Benina
airoort to captivity.
The unscheduled call at Ben-
ina came jnst four hours before
:he two men were due to arrive
it Khartoum in triumph to take
their places at hhe head of the
jew Sudanese regime.
Shortlv before 5 a.m. the air
-j-aFt — call sign Victor M»ke —
crossed the coast of North
lilUJU .1 i J
thing in his ear and then led
him forward to the fiight deck.
Hasty conference
Col. Al-Noor returned for a
hasty conference with his
led Abou kassem Ibrahim, who
- quickly decreed a state of emer-
gency throughout _ the country,
ordered radio station staff and
other key workers to return to
‘ 8 their posts and, in ringing
b' 5 tones, shouted:
the “The revolution stands fast.
3e w Sudanese regime. two men, both looking very The armed forces will continue
Shortlv before o a.m- the air orr Je<L w ent forward together. to carry out your «'ilL Long
^-aFt — call si e n \ ictor M’ke— - wor . . r , A i. live Numeirv. Long live the
crossed the coast of North Five minutes later. Col. Ai ^ nn
Africa and entered Libyan air Noor reappeared and swjtcoeo x,t-Col Babikr Al-Noor and
space. The first class compart- on t he lights in the compart of Hamada nah, two men
meat was in darkness, with meat. «ho should have been at the
most of the 10 passengers woke up another Sudanese n p the Communist-
asleep. . D a«enaer and whispered to dominated junta in the Sudan.
Col. Ai-Noor and Major Cj'\ ■* We are being hi lacked. w . ere s tij] being held in Ben-
Hamadallah were in the two Libyans are forcing the , ha:J * | 2S t n j ? ht after their
Front seats. Fast asleep behind „ . Back P- Col. 5 Seizure had been authorised by
i..... ivp<-P \Ir Erir AnSlin, First '.OUnnilr” ” n r~-AAa& T ihva « anM-Tjim-
% vere Mr Eric Anglin. First
LONDON JXALY
Home News Z, 3, B & 15
Foreign News 4
Arts Notices H
Art Sales
Births. .Marriages & Deaths 28
pity News 1«. 18, 13 & 2i
City Prices ^
Classified AdvL Index IS
Court and Social 13
The kidnapped Sudanese leaders, Lt.-Col. Babikr
Al-Noor (left) and Major Farouk Hamadallah,
setting out from Heathrow Airport on the flight
which had an unscheduled ending at Benghazi.
Dutch firm recalls
chemicals ship
DAILY TELEGRAPH REPORTERS
riTHE Dutch chemical firm Azco last night abandoned
X its plan to-dump 600 tons of chemical waste 700
mPps off the Irish coast after strong pressure from the
British, Icelandic and Irish Governments.
The firm ordered the tanker Stella Maris, 700 tons,
carrying the chemicals, to turn back to Holland as it was
heading for Stornoway in p —
the Outer Hebrides to re-
fuel. nmr pp a
Mr J. Dijkema, an Azco direo- LJIULdLlUi
for, said on Dutch television last
night that the chemicals would CONFIRMED
now be stored in a sealed tank
for two years imtil the firm had __ T - 0 _- . _ -
built a suitable incinerator. "IJV SPA I IV
But despite the change of plan, - . •
he described the international By o^r Madrid Correspondent
to resign
By ROWLAND SVMMERSCALES, Political Staff
*JM*R JENKINS, who is likely to be opposed in
the autumn ballot for the Deputy Leader-
ship of the Labour party by Mr Michale Foot,
was called upon to resign yesterday by Hichard
Crossman, for his pro-Market speech to the
Parliamentary Labour party on Monday. -.
An article in this week’s New -Statesman, which Mr
Crossman edits, accuses Mr Jenkins of “ shattering the
unity that Mr . Wilson had for mouths been laboriously
trying to build up,” of “ recklessness,” and of exercising
“ freedom without res- 1— 1 —
The conclusion of the GUILLOTINE
tide is that Mr Jenkins - .
ould take the opportunity nmT iTTr-n
the national executives 1 P
risinn “ tn nnnnsp pntrv " 1. XIXiaJJ
protests against the proposed c . , .
dumping as emotional and out of V T'HE Spanish Government
proportion. announced last night .
that cholera had readied
Minesweepers alerted Spain. Seven cases , under
^ _ „ __ . , . . investigation for nine days
w ,iSd be' b.i'ffltotlaSm had proved positive,
within a few days. There have been no other cases
* j- _« v - . . reported, said a Muristiy of
Azco direclors took their dea- information tourism official
Sion to recall the tanker as three ^ patients m confined to a
Irish naval minesweepers stood clim - c in ^ prDvince of 2ara .
i y ♦ a Li ea m!T r lr soza; over 200' miles from the
cept the ship if she entered Irish crowded Costa Brava beaches.
waters. All a re malting a full re-
in a statement, the firm said coverv, said the Government. A
they had acted after a request full statement is expected later,
by the Dutch Government “ to it was learned that the cholera!
avoid _ international political strain has been identified as the
difficulties.” same which has already been
by the Dutch Government
avoid international pol
difficulties.”
But it still maintained that reported in Asia and Africa.
the dumping would have been
scientifically “acceptable” as a
temporary measure.
The waste, chlorinated hydro-
carbons, is produced in a new
process called oxy-chlorination
in the manufacture fo plastics. It
includes chloroform and carbon
tetrachloride, which is used as
a cleaning fluid. - -
The Stella Maris had already
been prevented from dumping
the chemicals in the North Sea | Australian seaman has been
off the Norwegian coast follow- picked np aln
ing pressure on the Dutch Gov- drifting in a li
ernment by Norway, Denmark in the Pacific
and Sweden. An Australia
Col Gaddafi. Libya's anti-Com-
munist leader.
of the work force — the highest
July figure since 3940 and a rise
of €1,452 in a month. Vic
Feather, TUC general secretaiy,
described the total as “ really
alarming.”
This month’s figures, issued
yesterday by the Employment
Department include 24,420 uni-
versity students registered as un-
employed while seeking vacation
jobs.
Details— F€: City Comment — P17
Editorial Comment — P14
£25m SHIP ORDER
By Our City Staff
The Ocean Steam Group, of
Liverpool has ordered a 55.000
deadweight-ton natural gas car-
rier costing £25 million. From a
French yard. The most ex-
pensive Brinish ship is the
I Queen Elizabeth, 65.S3G gross
| tons, costing £29 million.
City Report — P19
LATE NEWS
Phone: 01-253 4242
Classified Advertisements
61-583 3939
ULSTER
(See Page 2)
Soldier fired at car which
broke through Belfast road-
block last night. Window
hit. Search for two men
who jumped from car.
SPEEDWAY
International: England 51,
Sweden ST.
Page
Entertainments Guide ...... 27
Films 11
Leader Page - 14
Obituary IS
Parliamentary Report 7
Personal 12
Sport 24, 26 & 27
TV & Radio Programmes 27
Way of the World 12
Woman’s Page 13
T V and Radio Programmes
and Entertainment Guide
— Inside Back Page
Cholera warning — P3
SEAMAN SAVED
AFTER DRIFTING
18 DAYS
By Our Washington Staff
An 18-year-old British-born
icked up alive and well after
rifting in a liferaft for 38 days
and Sweden. An Australian Embassy spokes-
___ ___ _ man in Washington said there
had been bad weather in the
TflRI PSfi TrtTAT area- with high seas. It was
J v/DLiEuO ll/l AJu incredible that he had remained
tdive.
UP BY 61.000 John Thomas Clough vanished
9 from the Australian troop
TA 7QC nnn carrier, Sydney, 12,569 tons, on
/ODjUUU July 3 with a 20-man. lifeexaft
_ „ . . . and rations for 20 for three davs.
By Our Industrial Staff 300 miles west of San Diego. He
Unemployment on July 12 was picked up by the Dutch
totalled 785.847. or 3-4 per cent, cargo ship Toloa, 5.1o8 tons.
WILSON
APOLOGY
TO RIPPON
By H.B. BOYNE
. Political Correspondent
-rpHE late-night row in the
. x Commons between Mr
Wfisorf and Mr Rippon
fizzled out tamely yester-
day with what Kir Rippon
took as “a handsome
apology ” by the Opposition
Leader^ - -
* The fact was that Mr Wilson
had boobed badly; but no one
was unkind enough • to nib it
, in. •
As reported in later editions
1 of The Daily Telegraph yester-
: day, he had hotly disputed Mr
Rippon’s right to quote from a
• letter ' by Lord Campbell of
Eskan, chairman of the Com-
monwealth ' sugar exporters’
group, -commending the . settle-,
ment negotiated' with the - Com-
monwealth. sugar ' producing!
countries at Lancaster JSouse
. in June. ......
Mr Wilson asserted that he
had a telephone call from Lord
Campbell’s office that morning,
saying: “If Rippon quotes that
letter I wrote him the day after,
he is not entitled to do it
because Rippon knows the real
facts.”
A misunderstanding
. But it was all a misunder-
standing. Intervening by leave in
the Common Market debate, Mr
Wilson explained: “In the heat
of the exchanges in lhe con-
cluding passage of Mr Rippon’s
speech last night I -interrupted
him with words which, after a
brief explanation which I feel
I owe to the house, I should like
to withdraw.
** The words I used were based
on my understanding, incorrect
as 1 now understand, of -a mes-
sage received in my office from
Lord Campbell of Eskan. • He
had felt -it right to inform me-
that he had given permission, to
Mr Rippon to quote a passage
from a letter he had written.
“Lord Campbell, in his capa-
city as chairman of the Common-
wealth sugar exporters, makes
information available to the
Government and Opposition on
a non-party basis which helps
the whole House. He felt that I
ought to know of what he had
authorised Mr Rippon to quote.
“The message as it reached
me gave me a different impres-
sion, which was accurately sum-
marised in my intervention.
While those concerned with re-
porting the message to me acted
in good faith, I take full respon-
sibility for all that occurred, and
I ask leave to withdraw the
words I used to Mr Rippon last
night"
Today's Weather
General Situation: Shallow de-
pression expected to become
slow-moving in S.W. approaches.
Low-pressure trough will move
slowly N. over Scotland.
London, E-, E. Anglia, Midlands,
Cent. N.: Dull early, showers.
Bright spells. Wind S., light
Max 75F 1240.
SJL, Cent. S. England, Channel
.-_ Islands, S.W,-. W. Wales and
Mon: Mainly cloudy. Thundery
rain. Wind S.W., light or mod-
erate. 72F (220.
N. Wales, N.W- Lake District:
Cloudy. Showers. Wind SJE,
light 72F (220.
S. North Sea: Wind force 1-3,
light air to light breeze. Sea
smooth.
Strait of Dover. English Channel
(E.»: S.W, force 4, moderate
breeze. Sea slight
Outlook: Unsettled. .
HUMIDITY FORECAST
Noon 6pjxt 6a.nL
(Sat)
London ' 60(47) 65(50) 9(MS0>
Birmingham 65(55) 75(65) 95(88)
Manchester 75<5o) 80(60) 95(68)
Newcastle 80(95) 85(85) 90(95)
Thursday’s readings in brackets
POLLEN COUNT
The pollen count at noon
yesterday was 32 Uow). Hie fore-
cast: low.
Weather Maps— P26
ponsibility.”
The conclusion of the
article is that Mr Jenkins
should take the opportunity
of the national executive's
decision “to oppose entry”
next Wednesday, “to abjure
the irksome ' collective re-
sponsibility ’ which inhibits a
deputy leader from speaking
freely.”
The New Statesman described
Mr Jenkins's speech as “ brilliant
and. emotional. It ridiculed his
Leader’s objections to entry, im-
pugned his veracity, and under-
mined his sagging credibility.”
It i s inferred that Mr Jenkins
regrets the “ damage be had
caused” and that he claims, in
. confidence, he misjudged the
situation.
** Disloyal attack ”
What was intended as a
reasonable defence of his own
position was transformed “ by
his inner tension and the. pres-
:sures-oF his closest advisers into
a diloyal and dishonourable-
attack on his own Leader.”
But Mr Jenkins needed party
unity as much as Mr Wilson. He
knew that he could only con-
duct his high-minded campaign
For entry if someone else did
the ignoble job of party manage-
ment.
“If his well-organised group
were to be too successful and
become a majority, no.one would
be more embarrassed than Mr.
Jenkins by the deadlock between
the party at Westminster and
the party outside that would
ensue.
?‘He frankly recognises that
if he were to stand against his
Leader fn October and win the :
ballot he could not hold the
party together.
. “His aloofness in Cabinet and
his narrow coterie of friends
exdude that possibility at
present Unless, therefore, he
prefers Mr Callaghan, be must
not only accept Mr Wilson as
Leader, bu twork loyally under
him and carry out nis strategy
for maintaining party unity.”
The article argues that by
taking the • Deputy Leadership,
Mr Jenkins put himself into an
impossible position. •. He is
Continued on Back P., CoL 4
CURB BILL
- By Oar Political
Correspondent; -
VVHEN the . Industrial
Relations Bill returns •
fo the Commons next week -
for approval of Lords’
amendments it will again
be subject to “guillotine”
procedure.
The - necessary timetable
motion will be bitterly opposed,
on- Wednesday afternoon by
Mrs Barbara Castle and her.
Labour team. It will nonetheless
be carried.
The - Government r .is allotting-
five days to Hie BilL According
Jtb-Mr William Whitelaw, Leader
of the House, this is the biggest
allocation of time given .to
Lords’ amendments on any Bill
in the whole history of Parlia-
ment. ....
But it will not be enough to
ensure that all of the 348
amendments are debated. ' r
When the “guillotine” falls
at midnight, - the amendments
allotted to' that particular day
will be .put to the vote en bloc,
regardless of whether they have
been discussed. . .
. The final division will take
place on Wednesday week, in
time for Royal Assent" next day.
Labour MPs calculate that
the Bill will have reached the
Statute Book with little more
thdn one-third of its clauses
debated. All the same, they will
be glad enough to see the eod
1 of it
ENGLAND 252-8
England were rescued at
Lord’s ■ yesterday, the first day
of the first Test against India,
by wicketkeeper Alan Knott
w‘ho scored 67, and the recalled
fast bowler John Snow, 52 not
out. England were 252 for eight
wickets at close of play. -
E. W. Swan ton and Pictures— P26
Switch all your
monthly repayments to
a single bank loan
If you’ve got payments on the car and furniture and TV,
perhaps a personal loan as well, it can add up to a really
heavy strain. Here’s a way to reduce it that’s open to any
houseowner. Get a single bank loan to pay them all off
exceptyour first mortgage. Your monthly payout will be
very much lower. These loans are arranged by Financings
(Guarantees) Ltd., Britain's leaders in personal financ e.
Take this example. Say yon owe £600 in outstanding
hire purchase and. personal loans and you're paying
£32 a month. You take a £600 Budget Loan. Pay every-
body off and your repayments will be only £xi a
month. Or have an extra £200 cash to spend now.
Your repayments would still be only £14-50 a month.
You have , a right to one of these.Budget Loans .if your
house is worth more than the amount outstanding on your
mortgage. And you can do what you like with the money.
Your loan can be up to 55 times your monthly repayment.
Interest is paid only on die reducing balance outstanding.
With a Budget Loan Account you will be entitled to a
substantial further advance after only nine months' repay-
ments. Se ndin g the coupon below will bring you a booklet
expla ining the Budget Loan scheme in de tail. So do it now.
Ffaancings (GUARANTY UVffTHJ
Chariton House, Kenton Road, Bartow, Middlesex.
Telephone: 01-204 0941
Please send me my copy of the Budget Loan Account booklet.
a subsidiary of First National Fiaance Corporatkm Ltd. J- lag
| OT/23/7 GROUP ASSETS EXCEED £lOO MILLION I
The Dotty Telegraph, Friday, July 23, 1971
By DAVID FLETCHER, Education Staff
^ DOSSIER on 30 of the most dilapidated
schools in Britain was drawn up. yesterday
by the National Union of Teachers for presen-
tation to Mrs Thatcher, Secretary for Education.
The union says that pupils and teachers in these
schools are working in conditions which would be pro-
hibited by law in other fields of employment It names
schools in which rain pours through the ceiling, heating
systems fail to work in
152 -
By PETER THORNTON
QNE of the. worst cases.
cited in today’s National
Union of Teachers’ schools
report is the 152-year-old
Church of England primary
school at Stock, Essex. It
has . no main drains and
occasional rat” is seen in
classrooms.
■Work began on a new school
for the village's 162 primary-
aged'children 12 years "ago. But
it was stopped after two class-
rooms had b
jeen completed and
compli
since then the childr
been divided by a half-mile
stretph of busy main road . be-
tween Chelmsford, and Billeri-
cay._ .
Pupils in the older part of
the school have to be escorted
along the road to get to their
playing field which is beside the
new bnilding.
They have to go to the rec-
tory, also on the main road for
physical education. In fog or
misty weather they do not -go
because teachers say the jour-
ney is too dangerous.
No assembly hall
The school has no assembly
halL School dinners which are
brought from Ingatestone. four
miles away, have to be eaten by
children at their desks in both
the new and eld buildings.
-The school is cramped and
crowded. Teachers’ books and
possessions- have to be kept in
the tiny entrance hall. A pre-
fabricated lavatory’ block has
been provided for the girls, hut
the boys still have to go to the
teachers’ lavatory to wash their
hands.
A hardboard wall has been
put- up to separate the class
rooms from the tiny room
which serves as headmaster’s
study, children’s sick room,
teacher’s common room and
school 'office. '
When the children are in
class it is almost impossible to
carry on a conversation there
and difficult to make a tele-
phone call.
Some improvement
Mr John Puncher, the head-
master, who shares this, roam
with one part-time'and three fulk
time teachers, said: “Some im-
provements have been made. We
haven’t seen a rat lately. There
was one bad occasion when a
child found a dead rat in his
desk.” He said rat-catchers had
blocked up all the holes.
“It- is purely a question of
money and priorities. If we
want better schools we have got
to be prepared to pay for them.”
Last year the sdiool was on
Essex County Council's prelim-
inary list for new building but
after the list had been sub-
mitted' -to -the' ■ Department' of
Education in December it was
struck off. It was placed on this
year's list and if it remains
there, Mr Puncher believes the
new school may be ready by
1973.
winter, walls run with
moisture, and lavatories
are put. out of action by
frost
Dead rats have been found
in classrooms' of- one school.
“ Our . survey provides so
much, disturbing evidence of a
highly nnsatisfacory ‘ state of
affairs as to warrant a full-scale
inquiry by the Secretary -of State
herself.”
The School Premises Regula-
tions, Which lay down min imum
standards for working condi-
tions and facilities in - State
schools,- are hot being, observed
in many schools, says the union.
In consequence, thousands
of teachers and pupils are" hav-
ing to put up with a situation
which would not be tolerated by
industrial and office workers and
which factory inspectors -would
use their powers to -prohibit in
industrial or commercial prem-
ises.
Secretaries protected
School secretaries and school
meals workers had their work-
ing conditions protected by the
Offices, Shops and Railway
Premises Act while pupils and
teachers in other parts of the
premises had no soch protection.
More than 500 replies - have
been received by the union in
response to its. request to
teachers for details about bad
working conditions in schools.
Detailed reports were prepared
on 30 schools.
One third of the 500 schools
complained of poor heating. One
described teachers teaching in
corridors and cloakrooms; and
in classrooms where the tem-
perature fell below 40F in
winter.
Another renly said: “Until'
we were instructed by the head-
mistress to leave on one heater
in each classroom overnight (in
spite of the additional fire
hazard) the temperature in the'
rooms in the morning averaged
48F and on Monday mornings
was sometimes as low as 40F.
Cierkenweli Parochial
.-•-f
By .4. J. McILROY in Belfast p
CHILDREN were used by gangsters to lure ac . •
v Army patrol into an ambush a Belfast^
nquest jury was -told yesterday. Cpl. Robert
iankier, 25, of Morland Road 3 Ipswich, was ■ i% , :
trying to radio 'details of the ainBush to lug .. ; 3
base when he § 0LDIE R SAW : J
FLAME IN •/;
MAN’S . HAND
Daily Telegraph Reporter
rpflF. second of two soldiers
A who fired at Desmond |i i N
- " 19, in a Bogside '
CUT-BACK
IN ‘OPEN’
STUDENTS
Learning to keep clean the hard way yesterday in
the playground of the “ dilapidated " Cierkenweli
Parochial junior school, where a wash-and-brush-up
in winter without hot water is anything but
child's play.
B M A Conference
By DAVID FLETCHER
. Education Staff
‘HTHE Open University is to
make a 20 pet cent cut
ia its next first-year intake
because" of unexpectedly
large numbers of students
staying oh into the 'second
year. ; - * .
Applications fori peaces have
fallen ' from .nearly .45,000 last
year to 55,182 for the next
foundation course but a spokes-
man said. yesterday. "I do not
think this indicates any slacken-
ing of interest in the Open
University.
“ Zt has happened because the
period for applications was 11
weeks shorter thafn last year.
The monthly rate \ of applica-
tions was actuaHy higher.
Doctors demand closer
watch on drug abuse
NEED NOT
By CLARE DOVER, Science Staff
TNkOCTORS pressed for barbiturates to be included
JLF in the Misuse of Drugs Act in a resolution passed
at the British Medical Association representative meet-
ing -in Leicester yesterday. If included, prescriptions
Family Planning
for barbiturates would
come ~ under closer
scrutiny.
Cases of over-prescribing
would be dealt with by
banning the doctor concerned
from prescribing, that drug.
“ Determined lot 1
School,, Finsbury, dating back to
1850. has
troughs in the
water
Junior
ack t
washin
playground with
is by coke stoves.
Smoky stoves
no hot water, classroom heating
When ht, these stoves emit
great clouds of smoke, causing
irritation to the children, making
them cough.”
The report from Iwerae
Minster .Primary School. Bland-
ford, Dorset built in 1884, says:
“ Moisture rises . from . the
round and saturates quarry-tile
hors in the entrance porch, two
cloakrooms and scullery.
A spokesman for the National
Union of Teachers said that
none of the schools.. An the
dossier was scheduled- : for re-
building -or major improvement.
The union's report and the
dossier have been , sent to Mrs
Thatcher and she has promised
to reply in writing to the critF
dsmsi _
Her department is at present
aUocating£152 million over the
175 to
years 1975 to 1976 to rid the
country of 19th-century primary
schools.
Editorial Comment — P14
Places are to ' be pffered to
20,000 of .the 55.000 applicants.
Last .year 25,000 were offered
places. '
The spokesman said:- “The
drop-out • rate of first-year
students after five months was
21 per. cent. This was lower than
a lot of people had expected.
“ Because more students have
progressed to the second-year
than -expected we have had to
reduce the n ambers which can
be admitted to the first- year.'
He declined to say what drop-
out rate the university expected
but added that students had
proved to be “a. very deter-
mined lot:”
Dr Frank Wells, of Ipswich,
pioneered the volu
X-RAY VICTIM
GETS £4,336
DAMAGES
who pioneered the voluntary
|. bans on amphetamines, told the
meeting that suicide is much
more frequent with barbiturates
than with any other drug.
Dr Wells said he had reduced
the prescribing of barbiturates
by over 99 per cent, in his own
|. practice and there had been a
redaction in prescribing through-
out Ipswich. In the last eight
months doctors there had re-
duced their prescriptions by
over 60 per cent.
Barbiturates, he said, were
being “increasingly abused.”
* S r S’ ^ Of Edinburgh,
told the conference that 1,000
nullum barbiturate tablets were
prescribed annually. "This is
sufficient to send every man,
woifcan and child to sleep for
three weeks,” he said. It was
also enough to eliminate the
complete population of England.
ABORTIONS
FOR POOR
SOUGHT
Suicide attempts
Dr.. Parry said that in Edln-
A man whose hands were de- burgh attempted suicides by bar-
formed by X-ray radiation while
operating a nickel-testing mach-
ine was awarded £4,336 dam-
ages at 'Gloucester Assizes yes-
terday.
John Chambers, 56, of Beattie
Avenue, Hunderton, Hereford,
also had a finger amputated.
The award was- against the
machine’s makers. Research and
Control Instruments Ltd., of Lou-
don.
The Special Commissioner, Mr
Adie-Shepherd, said ''Mr Cham-
bers thought at first that his
hands had been stung by
nettles. He was now. unable to
pick- up money and fasten but-
tons.
six
bitu rates . had . increased
times in the last five years.
Doctors also voted that the
Council of the BJVLA. should ask
the Bar Council - to subpoena
doctors to give evidence in legal
cases as infrequently as possible.
Presenting the motion. Dr Wells
said that in one instance £500
had been wasted.
Three consultants, two G Ps
and one junior hospital doctor
were siippoened . to give evi-
dence in a battered baby case.
The first day the hearing was
adjourned. On the second day.
the doctors travelled a total of
780 miles to attend the court, as
a result of which SO out-patients
were not seen and 200 patients
missed being seen at four
surgeries.
The same thing happened the
day after. “The cost to the
Hertfordshire ratepayer was
£500 and none of the doctors was
calied.” Dr Wells said.
By JOHN KEMP
Social Services Correspondent
,r J l HE Family Planning
Association was urged
yesterday to set up its own
abortion dinics offering
tow-priced - operations for
the poor.
Mr Caspar Brook, director,
made it dear that the organisa-
tion s ruling council bad no
policy on abortion. He was
speaking on the final day of the
association’s 50th anniversary
conference.
Several delegates called on
the council to tackle the prob-
lem of abortion with the same
pioneering zeal with which it
had tackled family planning
when the organisation began.
Dr Paoune Jackson, who
pioneered the association's first
clinic offering male sterilising
operations in Cardiff, said they
were able to help many men
unable to afford the higher
prices of private operations.
“I can see scope for a similar
kind of service for abortions
for people who caanot afford to
pay high fees," she said.
The FPA would he in an ideal
position to _ follow up abortion
with intensive family planning
care.
Daily Telegraph Reporter
jpUNTERS are unde - no
“■ legal obligation to
answer questions pit to
thpm by customs *nd ixcise
officers investigating pos-
sible betting tax offerees by
bookmakers. The cisterns
men must leave if re-
quested.
These points are m»de clear
in a Treasury reply o repre-
sentations made nv vir John
Peyton. Conservative MP for
Yeoril. on behalf of IVjI George
Pern', of Combe Strict Lane,
Yeovil. Mr Perry objected to
customs men investigating his
betting in their search for evi-
dence against a bookmaker.
Commenting nn the reply. Mr
Perry. 45. managing drector of
a concrete-making irm and
nivner of two racenor es. said:
“Now punters know wiere they
stand.
“ Simply by uphni log their
legal rights they can make the
task of customs men so: difficult
that in time they will Wave the
betting public alone. '
Most embarrassing’
“Most punters like to keep
their betting strictly to them-
selves, and a visit from customs
xassrag.
men can be most enffiarrassfng,
■‘When they called on me I
was not sure of my rights. Now,
if they come back; they will get
no further than the doorstep.”
The Treasury, in its reply to
Mr Peyton, said
PLAN TO PREACH
IN WALES BY
EX-SOCCER STAR
■Thenrsl barrel : irnasiue • The second barrel: the v not '■
;thiitYpr more ci^8io3traj®ht .T:,'. .r. *: the scotch backlato the wood to
whiskies each maturing: in. oaken, , let the malts mingle, Emery hod ■
' ; casks.-Hjen. yvhen.thoj'S'F ' ■ jriatune - together for at least .
“' * -reached tfeerr mdsvHn&J peak,- * • ■ • ■ ! smother -year wad * half. Growing '• \
uhegina^ tbembkndorf together. \ ■ - Mbsubtlety and character until j
. *. Most people wotrfd be satisfied ; > . *'< tefiavpnr emerges {hails’ . v ' ~ ;
- afcthis^oisga. But nci,' .. £ \ . % undoubtedly greater than' the ■
7 raMfe fists'
sum of Its parts.
Double-barrelled. ’ ’ to'nxature the malts; '
Peter Knowles, the former
Wolves and England Under-25
international soccer player, who
decided to leave football for
religion nearly three years ago,
wants to become a missionary in
Wales.
_ Knowles, who devotes all his
time to being an unpaid minister
for Jehovah’s Witnesses, said:
Mv sole remaining ambition
is to become a nioneer (mission-
ary) in a place like Wales, where
the Witnesses are not very
Siren
The" former footballer, who
has no plans to return to the
game, works 91 hours a week.
His brother Cyril, is a profes-
sional footballer with Spurs.
Easy ride to
For full details oF-DFDS Sailings
and Scandinavian Holidays ask your
Drive-on late afternoon. Big DFDS luxury ships
give you air-conditioned cabins, c ruise -liner
amenities, first-class service. You reacPF Esbjerg,
Denmark, noon next day, rested, relaxed, refreshed, aeta Travel Agent or send in
On Danish roads, driving's a pleasure^you can “upon
easily reach Copenhagen iiuimefor dinner. Oi go
by rail, it's equally quick and comfortable.
For independent travel, or one of the DFDS
Inclusive Holidays in Scandinavia, sail DFDS from
Harwich or Newcastle.
What a wonderful way to go i
“Democratic process”
Mr Brook told her: "I am
quite sure that the FPA will
have to consider this, but we are
a democratic organisation and
have to abide by the democratic
process.” It would have to be
raised by branches to the
national council in tbe normal
way.
He told another questioner
that he did not want “the fav-
ourable dimate that exists at tbe
moment for family planning in
local authorities" to be “con-
fused, fouled and negated ” be-
cause there was *n argument
about abortion in the FPA.
"Mr Erook later confirmed that-
the council of the association
had given instructions to staff
about 12 months a , to to estab-
lish an experimental pregnane*-
adriee service for women s«ek-
irc abortions. He would not sav
"‘here or when it would be
Opoopfi.
The r en toe would adri'e
women ehmit phnrtion? sod not
them in tonrh with other doc-
tor* and clinics. TP A doetnrs
would not have to deride
whether or not a girl needed an
abortion.
Minister's attitude
Before making any decisions
about abortion serriw th** a«*o.
riatiotl will have to toke raretojl
notp of tho attitude of Sir
■Tosenh. Secretary for Sori-ti
Porvireis. ”'ho announced earlier
this week rh=>f Govornm^nt
grant? to the organisation u-oidd
be increased by' nearly £lD0.nnn
a year.
At a Pr<“«^ briBfin rf fnliov-in?
his own .address to the confer-
pure. ,C]r KotrH c n P ,r "°n* , ‘»d -
“ thi* Government w-niifd not b®
willing tr> P3V mon^- infn an
Pry»ni*aHftn rti* POO-
tTP-teptiou i” J *h ^hor^on.'’
that during the
interview Mr Perry was told that
he need not beto the officers,
who would leave if requested.
Mr Perry, maintains this did
not happen. “After 7 made a
statement I asked whether I
would have to appear as a wit-
ness in any proceedings taken
against the bookmaker.
“For business reasons I did
not want to get involved, and the
customs men said it was most
unlikely that I would be asked
to apoear. But I was never told
I need not co-operate with them.”
shot dead.
Mr James Elliott, the city
oroner, said : “ These gang-
ters were prepared to use
Jnldren to lure the Army to
their destruction in Cromac
Square.
** It is an appalling story.
It js hardly credible that it
could have happened in a
civilised city."
Mr Elliott said it was esti-
mated that up to five weapons
were used and it was a mercy
that the whole patrol was not
massacred.
In Northern Ireland a coroner
or a jury cannot give a verdirt
of murder so on the direction of
the coroner the jury returned an
open verdict.
Stones thrown
Rifleman Grenville Scammell
said the patrol was in Charge of
Cpl Banlder and it had been
directed to the area by military
police shortly after midnigbt on
Mav 22. . •
Between 14 and 17 youths
started to throw stones and
hnttles at the Army vehicle,
which followed them into Cromac
Square. Cpl Bankier, who was
operating the radio, got out of
the vehicle as the youths dis-
apoeared.
“ As soon as he alighted we
were fired upon from the front
in Lagan Street. I saw three or
four men on the corner and
three or four muzzle flashes
coming from the men. '
“Cpl Bankier fell to the
ground as he tried to report the
ambush on the -radio.” It was
difficult far the patrol to get to
him as he lay bleeding on the
ground because of the firing.
I
T* 1
Beattie, IS. in a
riot on July S, told tne
inquest on Beattie in Lon- J-^fr
donderry yesterday that ne
saw a flame and an object
in the man's hand. r
He was referred to as Soldi® - -
B and declined to give his rank,
as did Soldier A who appeared
yesterday. He wore dark glasses
and had his collar turned up.
Soldier B said he went into
Bogride as part of a support
command to protect a group of
Royal Green jackets, who were
under attack by a mob. Three
bombs were thrown under an -
Army Saracen. . .
“I saw people running away
when I was 40 metres from the .
barricade. I saw this chappie
standing apart from the others,
but in tnc
NIGHT OF VIOLENCE
Soldier and woman hurt
In a night of violence which
ended early yesterday with a
soldier and a ynung housewife
injured by bullet wounds, I
saw the terrorist tactics of
shield! a? behind children and
teena ffers.
Mobs of young people at-
tacked a patrol of tbe Royal
Green Jackets which had just
searched a public house in the
Falls Road.
Tbe army fired rubber bullets
to try to dear the jeering
crowds and three times troops
had' to shelter behind their
armoured vehides. As rioters
kept gathering a man with a
sub-machine gun stepped out in
front of them and began firing.
Shortly afterwards Mrs
Bridget McGaughey was found
behind the army line with a
shoulder wound.
The injured soldier has been
named as 2nd Lieut N. G. Dixon
of Hartley Wintney, near Basing-
stoke, Hants.
e centre of the general
crowd.
Aimed at chest
“I saw a dark object in bis
hand. In the other hand, he was
holding a flame. I could not
distinguish what the dark object
was. but I presumed he was
going to light a bomb because
three had already been thrown.
Soldier £ said he aimed at the
man's chest and fired. “ He
seemed to stumble and trip. At
the same time as I fired. I heard
another shot.”
Mr Brian HubtoiL Q C. coun-
sel for the Army, yesterday said
he was prepared to call the
two soldiers on condition that
their names should not be re-
vealed and that they should not
sign their depositions.
Inquiry critic
of Ministry.
Daily Telegraph Reporter
OPERATION
ERROR LEFT
MAN HUNGRY
A 42-year-oid man who vent
into hospital to hare a duodenal
ulcer operation had bis intes-
tines connected up wrongly
afterwards,, said Dr Rosalind
Mance in a letter to the British
Medical Journal.
Instead of his stomach beina
con r Pried to the beginning of
ihe 22ft of small intestinp. where
most of the digestion of fond
takes Place. =t was connected
to the end The man was alwavs
hunsrrv and all ihat food did
w.-.s t<> mek*r him en to the
Ia«'-»fory— -up to 15 times a dav.
When it was found it only
took f<iur-and-a-half minutes for
a barium nreai to pass through
Him. the Patient was opened ud
and the m ! stekn found. His in-
testines "?re reconnected oro-
nertv and h* nuicklv eot back
to normal. “This i* not a criti-
cism Imt n rj'itiondcy te’r.” com.
mentnd Dr M,*nce. “ Mistakes
are made.”
‘LEAVE BELFAST’
GRANTS OF £120
The Northern Ireland Govern-
ment is to give grants to en-
courage families to move out of
Belfast and settle in develop-
ment areas, Mr Roy Bradford,
Minister for Development, an-
nounced in London yesterday.
A grant of £120 will be offered
to people moving to five growth
areas at Antrim, Bangor, Car-
rickfergus, Craigavon and New-
townards. An extra £50 will be
paid to families moving into
new subsidised homes.
T ORD GIFFORD, the
Labour peer, criticised
the Ministry of Defence for
refusing to allow Army
evidence to be given at the
inquiry he opened in Lon-
donderry yesterday into the
deaths of two Londonderry
men.
Lord Gifford is conducting
the inquiry, with Mr Paol
O’Dwybr, a New York lawyer
and Civil Rights worker, and
Mr Albpj Sachs, 56. a South
African-born graduate of Cape
Town Unirersitv. into the shoot-
ing of Seamus Cusack and
Desmond Beattie in Bogside on
July 8.
Mr 'William Breslanu, 31, a
schoolteacher, of Castleview
Park, Londonderry, said at one
time in the area before the
shooting, a group of soldiers
had been surrounded by a
crowd that was ** quite savage”.
He said he saw three men —
one of them Cusack — in the
garden of a house. One had
thrown stones. A rubber bullet
was fired by the soldiers and
then there was a second shot.
Mr Bresland said that he did
aot see any rifle with the men
and. at no stage, did he see any-
thing even resembling small
arms or a rifle.
The bearings continues today.
-h <•
*.UR-
-- l-J
h •
i'-n ■
n ‘ in-r,
■ '•.<■1
• -is:,;*.,
CLOTHES CRITIC
OF PRINCE HAS
£3-655 DEBTS
were
OOT.^TTT* cevryr? TTOirj
UNTREATED MILK
Name
Address
C 99
DFDS (UK) Limited. Travel,
8 Berkeley Square. London W1X 6HJ
Telephone : 01 -629 351 2
By Our Agricultural stuff
Official proposals for a com-
pulsory colour code for milk
bottle ceps were issued yester-
day by the Ministry of Agricul-
ture. They are based nn the
present voluntary scheme, in
which gold, silver and red tops
are used.
Untreated milk, at present
unmarked, should ha\e a green
top, it is proposed. The prr»-
PomIs u-iB now be considered
by the dairy industry and
interested organisations.
K-»rl D*n*c. 40. a fashion rim-
cijlranr and author, i-h-’ criti-
c're'i ,h e prjncp nf Wales's
ejetbes in a men's wear maa^-
7*ne earlier tiiis vear. appeared
for public evfljninpt’on at ton-
(1n n ffanferuDtov Court vester-
div. He said in the ariide that
lh- Frinrf , 's trn>jc-.r4
"hre?v an old nun's”
Mr Pa 1 1. is. of rinrH-ij,
cion«. Tr, rrine»on PHc r
il-er'i.-*: rteh,l-= n | „
an 4 i«rte r f r^oi t.i 3m H
tire “*r-noni : ca1 riirnp'® ” and
til d*h*5 r.->r bi« fajln.p
For hi' cnuri nope^rsnre Mr
Prite 2 . who has long hair, wore
a hbrl.- ;ij t. bin* 1 an ! white
shirt end blue .ini nature tie.
The hesrina »•*« concluded.
RA1IIU ISAM FINED
A radio ham endangered the
iprpption of ship distoes- «i;-
iwls l*v hinrfdcastin-’ on * n™arhv
Frpqitencv. magis»r-’te« ?i p'-p.s-
fmi. rwto'.s'nire. v-are ro|d . P ^.
teHq-. Fi-inF M-ieli. «d L«'i«-
ivpnd R,P.H. III. ?s toil, w.ij finPli
£110 for Usin; a radio trans-
milter without a licence.
f:
k ‘UGLY TASTE
OF OZ’
By C. A. COl GHUN, Old Bailey Correspondent
•■■ , T HE “ SchooI kids’ Issue ” of OZ, the under-
ground magazine, must have left an
“ u £ ly tast ® in the mouths of the jury ” when
-^they read it For the first time at the start of
•. * he tnaI ’ th e Crown prosecutor, Mr Brian
!:_Lbaby, suggested at the Old Bailey yesterday.
F ' He to * d the jury that the magazine was the epitome
. ® r * ne permissive society. It advocated calling the police
P ! gs and claimed that sexual activity was to be
" “ — admired for itself.
■*?&}
bSiliJiiif!
■w
-M
JfSg'J *****}
u#
■pf* TTCSTTn Inc - ^ Lear -V said the maga-
^ mJvDEjU JullO sine encouraged homosexu-
. __ ality. flagellation and
PANDA CAR ne “ ophi,ia -
He argued rhat the magazine
'EVYn /^T>TT»yTT? a,so c,a, !" ed there was nnthins
.T wJK 1 JK I Irl K Wrong With promiscuity and if a
person caught venereal disease
Daily Telegraph Reporter i hf* «{! i y °? e u° f tbe h * zards
r>r TOWN avpbvJL “ * ,fe 1,ke catching a cold.
* ,C Pandacara't5 R fral»J hS If l £ e J ' ury felL the ma 6aane
nartnf? in SSLJ 0 w h «? 't as °, bscen e. he told them, then
partner in crime, a beauti- the obscenity could onlv be ius-
rul brunette, on 34 night- tified as in the interests of
time burglaries, it was science, literature or art.
stated at Nottingham As for science, he said no
Assizes yesterday. defence witness has suggested
The association between the j ssuc of 0: was a medi-
Avery. 33, and Sheila Bridges, cal te . xl book -
36, lasted two years before , A literary expert, Mr Mervyn
policewomen making routine in- Johns, had said he thought
quiries about stolen prescription there was only one article
forms, discovered love letters in where the writer showed
Bridges’s Sat written on official promise.
police notepaper. Referring to the art defence.
They were signed “John" *1* said Mr Feliks ToroLSm,
and part oF one of them said: tbe artist, had explained that
“ When T am on nights I am works of art should be ennobling,
supposed to be working for the Mr Leary added: “Do you
He argued that the magazine J
also claimed there was nothing
wrong with promiscuity and if a A htthtv
person caught venereal disease IVimT
It was only one of tbe hazards
w liFe like catching a cold.
If the jury fell the magazine r’lIAT T?TT»
was obscene, he told them, then fzjrf X |j_i ill fll /
the obscenity could only be jus- v
tified as in the interests of
science, literature or art. IS/" A 1? TVTlVd
As for science, he said no Yr y J.J. x "
defence witness has suggested
CHOLERA
WARNING
'.v **#•'. -.v*: Si'.. ;-?,v /'} .
Waiting t° be vaccinated yesterday in the Spanish city of Zaragoza which the
World Health Organisation says has “almost certainly *’ been hit by cholera.
4 Outstanding 9 RAF officer fined
By GERDA PAUL
ANYONE visiting or pass-
* ing through tbe Zara-
goza area of Spain should
be vaccinated, a Depart-
ment of Health spokesman
said yesterday after the
World Health Organisation
in Geneva had confirmed
cases of cholera there.
“We shall require an inter-
Daily Telegraph Reporter He was considering petitioning on R A F form 700; and behaved
A WING COMMANDER the convening and conforming in an improper manner by land-
X ‘*‘ was “ severely reori- £- Vice Marshal H. A. J. ing the Dominie an dthen pro-
jr7„ seve ^ cly B.rd-Wilson. Air Officer Com- ceeding to take off while still in
manaea and fined £200 mandmg 2o Group, Linton-on- motion on one engine and with
for flying offences by a Ouse, against its severity. the flaps in the landing position,
court martial at Finning- Middlebrook, bolder of the A statement concerning
lev near DnnrachPT- vpetPr vras found guilty on four MkJdlebrook’s “character and
iey, near Doncaster yester- of the five charges. These in- particulars of service” said that
day. eluded that he performed a pro- he become a wing commander in
He was Win* Coramandpr hibited aerobatic manoeuvre, a 1967.
Gregory Middlebrook 44 *w re ro ’ ‘a- ? Dominie jet As a squadron leader be
officer-in-charee ' of the ’ Flvimr twiner on a flight from -pi bra 1- formed No. 112_ Squadron, a
tUnk L F" ry on, ad Se n lThV°iS
though, isn’t it?” anything ennobling in this !« ca »,i,£r . va< J loa- mgley. He bves at Bourne, near . , , , M.ssile Unit, and by his
. _ 6 fion f rora anyone who has been SDaldin* Lines. Middlebrook stated that- he energy and enthusiasm suc-
in or around that area within „ &> _
Avery, of Birch Avenue, ma S aaae -
Beeston. Notts, and Bridges, a 23rd dav nf trial
divorcee and mother of two, of Jr “ “ a ^ 01 0181
Queen's Road, Beeston, admitted The accused are R
Middlebrook stated that he energy and enthusiasm suc-
rolled the plane “ out of sheer ceetied in his task beyond all
tbe previous five days,” he Group Captain R. J. Carson, exuberance in clear air space expectations,
added. president of the court said that and beautiful weather,” in ^
Queen's Road, Beeston; admitted The accused are Richard ~ We would not refuse a man in ® living at the sentence the ignorance “bur not" in" defiant abn/t^ have 6 harf d F^rlShilf-
auisra 5 Lirg's r. was per -
slealf D g rS n f S „” re sSJ 32 “edlSrof ite l a inte L na L' <,na ! certi6cate ,' ^ ^ mier d°“ The other charges- related to ESd to he the mos? effi"i°ent'
form D a nd endeavnurimf^li^rfv Fm.,^ 1 “Sdfro? 6 «F ^ offences on May 6 this, year missile squadron within Fighter
S a Br &%S S , ®^ J «oie A a5 KE ^ d es S r teightdayS,mderd0Se cjj^. rented to BS/S £jSe J
«^ 0r ri,fi F advising him .that if he or any The se nlence IS subject to con- when Middlebrook was demon- Command,” it said-
: Up to f 1000
Unsecured Loan
on the strength
of your
credit standing
The Loanmaster Plan places more Importance
on personal integrity than material security -
therefore it is not confined to houseowners,
but is available to anyone who is oredlt worthy.
You may borrow up to £1,000 and use the
money when and how you like.
Quick and Simple
Application for a loan involves no fuss;
I complicated form filling or expensive fees.
Your request can usually be met within a day or two.
Borrow what you can afford
The amount of the loan depends entirely on what
you know you can afford to repay each month.
Repayment is usually spread over 36 months
and includes both capital and Interest at only 15 %
per month on the reducing balance.
Money always at hand
You can regard your Loanmaster Loan as a
perpetual overdraft and continue to borrow up
to the agreed amount whenever you need the
money.
Income tax relief may be claimed on the interest if
the money is used for a qualifying purpose -
and on this we will gladly advise you.
Free Life Assurance
Your family Is fully protected for the outstanding
balance provided you are under 60. .
Post this coupon in confidence and without
commitment for fuit particulars and a proposal form .
Let lo&riMmt&r
serve you
f’s with endless,
confidential credit.
I ^~Z Our local Branch is at your service.
To Loanmaster,
Julian S. Hodge & Co. Ltd.,
llli»ESa&te®a Merchant Bankers,
Floor 6, Julian S. Hodge Building, .
Newport Road. Cardiff. Tel : 42577-
Newport Road, Cardiff. Tel : 42577.
WithMt obligation, plain sand Eontidamial partial tan
of Loounanar aad addins at iiamt Bruch Otftcd.
tain 100 tablets by a forged pre- Wandsworth Bridge Road. Chel- member of his family becomes Agnation.
strating the Dominie to four He had "worked Ion* and
»mption. sea. and Oz Publications Inc., ni within 21 days, they should After the case, which lasted foreign’ air attaches based at arduous hours °far bevond ^he
Sentencing Avery, who is mar- Ltd., of Grand Buildiugs, Trafal- or 0 to their doctor.” three days, Group Captain H. embassies in London. normal rail n f Autv y a nrf
ried with two children, to seven Sar Square,
three days, Group Captain H. embassies in London.
L” j_r j -i__j .i_ _ I ' ‘
normal call of duty, and has
Name —
Address
Travel .agents will pass the King, defending, described the These were that he exceeded proved an outstanding example
inarlmonf c reninraRisn . cm Ion ro ac 11 mrrarliKlu ha.fh In ,k. - -J it _« itw. 1 r .. « R . K " nl “r l,:
vears imprisonment Mr Justice All deny conspiring to corrupt Department’s requirements on sentence as " incredibly harsh in the speed limit oF 297 .knots; to all officers aad mauE
Thompson said: “You must take public morals between January to holidaymakers. For the the circumstances.”
ihe largest share of the blame. ?nd June 1970 by producing an majority of holidaymakers it is -
You broke your trust and used issue of Oz called Oz No. 28, a matter of their own discretion
,-our knowledge to effect these School/cids 1 ' Issue containing whether or not they get vac-
jurglaries.” obscene, lewd articles, drawings cinated.
and illustrations with intent to
Sex appeal debauch young children and ini- Few tourists
Failed to report the excess speed I his comm and. 1
Sex appeal debauch young children and im-
Bridges was jailed For five Sorted IUStfUl ^
■ears. The judge told her:
Few tourists
x>nugei« was jauea ror nve nArv*>rn>H rfprirpB ^ ew to ur| sts visit the area
•ears. The judge told her : P e ™ erted ae ®*\ ^ which is about 100 miles from
‘You used your sexual appeal .They also denied publi.hm^ t j, e epa^, and more than twice
>n this man to keep the affair magazine as an obscene ^ far from the Costa Brava.
SS3l. .“.“port and JSmSS, * ?r Tbn, Cook
The thefts involved almost cop ief 0 f it for publication for sai ,f yesterday: Naturally we
M.OOO-worth of property. Mr The trial was in its 25rd V V 11 , leH . P e °P le tbat there is
’atrick Cotes-Preedy, prosecut- dav yesterday cholera in Spam, and if they are
- :_I A ... I r»_- J J wnn-iPH fn an In Ihmr nu-n
"”f / " <,* " . ■ — VO"’" — ■— < • *. . — owv;v
•• i-i.w-m- « • ■; — —7
•oing.
The thefts involved almost
M.OOO-worth of property. Mr
’atrick Cotes-Preedy, prosecut-
ng. said Avery and Bridges
ticked some of their jobs from
police lists of houses where
iwners were known to be away
tn holiday.
- ,n>i •• / : ? r i
' • • - '■ •'
■ ■ ■ I I '—if • ■}
day yesterday cholera in Spain, and IF they are
day yesterday. worried, to go to their own
Attack on comedian do » l , or T' ’ t, «
„ , , _ , , At Lunn-Poly, a spokesman
Mr Leary also attacked the said yesterday: “The normal
comedian, Marty Feldman, 37, reaction in a case like this is for
• .7 : .... ' ■ . .
• ■ . • ./.■ '.7{
"• ' ! ’*. ’ ■: ‘-H
« • a who 8 ave ev,dence on behalf of those who are nervous to get
° n Neville. vaccinated. But the vast majority
ag as a fnendly pouceniam, ha During his 30 minute appear- would not bother, unless cholera
;ept an old woman taUons at ance in court, Feldman asked actually hits their resort”
l er j ?ardeQ ea l»d Q ?hrnn°<fh the Judge Argyle, Q C, whether he The Spanish Tourist Office,
*oIIii* e dnnr n ^and ransacked the wa * waking him up; told Neville had many inquiries during the
35 * "SJSSk teSStefr and he thought the judge was still day from would-be holiday-
•alh "vSirth more than £1^00. reading a copy of Oz and, in an makers. It withdrew an earlier
worth more man ti.-uu. asjde tQ ^ Press bench . as he statement saying: “It appears
Avery finally admitted ms jef t t h e court — which will not there is no fear of cholera at
part in the robberies and told be recorded in the official tran- all.”
the police: “There were times script — said he thought the judge — ■
when I knew I should end the was a ** boring old fart."
association but I was so infatua- Mr Leary commented: “ Up to STR.I
' 7 ' . ,■ .-f '! ' '7:?|73- ■
• S'. ■ ...•■ •: ■ • •• ■ .4 .
"" - v - ; ; 7:‘7 ; -7
association but I was so infatua- L ear y commented: “ Up to
ted by her. It was like being on t jj e b e came to giv evi-
a drug, hating Sheila and hating dence, it may be that you con-
myself for doing it.
I don’t love her- not like I able person.
sidered Feldman a totally admir-
!ove my wife and family. It’s a
strange attraction.”
“ Unhappily, his performance
on the television box was alto-
STRUCK-OFF
DOCTOR BACK
ON REGISTER
y H*
; 1 o ! ::a.
Det Chief Insp. Arthur different from his per-
Hallam, who led the investiga- n»™|w „
.b°pped°into h a e life 5 = criSelfS that S ays there j* more obscenity ductV hasbeenresiored to“the
pvrited bv it Averv was in the B'bl e than in this edition register aFrer a decision bv the
W.n^iSSr of Or?” Mr Lean- asked the jury. General Medical Council's dis-
n , * . _ .« o t. ik i ii ciplfnary committee yesterday.
•;He knew °f Schoolboy prank Mr Pau] „ rtn ; eman told the
ected b\ f; _ Mr John Mortimer, Q,C.. de- committee that Dr John Arthur
euld teu by V? , fending Anderson and Dennis, McCarney had been found guilty
adio whether there were pa is saj .j a jj U g; e quantity of public of over-prescribing drugs to
n the area. . time and money had been spent patients other than in the course
* in the “ ardent, eager pursuit of of treatment. His name was sus-
nnx ’I ' u rrr what?— a schoolboy prank.” pended and he had been unable
ier difterent from his per- a Leicester doctor, struck off
nance in the witness box. last Julv after being found guilty
What sort of witness is it of serious professional miscoii-
n the area.’
no ■» AAA 'I ’ U irrT what?— a schoolboy prank.” pended and he had been unable
3rt>D,UUU lXUlirl Mr Mortimer argued: “Ob- to practise since July 4 last
scenity is in tbe mind of the year.
AT1MTTTED BY beholder. One man’s obscene Last year’s committee had ad-
article can be another man’s journed .sine die consideration
A TT»nAT> r r HT17XT nursery reading.” of a postponed judgment con-
AUaItUiiI MLil He said tbe Obscene Publi- cerning six separate matters—
cations Act should not be used five involving the use of alcohol
Diamonds worth £25.000 and to stifle opinions under the guise — on which he had appeared be-
10.000 in English banknotes 0 f calling them dirty or obscene, fore the committee in Novem-
•pre stolen from the security jf f ree spe ech and free dis- her. 1969.
olds of a VC 10 airliner at cllss j on me ant anything at all, Mr Geoffrey Jones, for Dr
lea throw airport by four loaders j^ey meant tolerance for people McCarney, referred to “ neuro-
mploved there Mr Michael w j t h whom one did not agree, tics” in Dr McCarney s prao-
ork-pn - . prosecuting, said at the trial was adjourned until tice. The doctor saw it as his
id Bailey yesterday. today. function to *• keep them going.
Alan Charles Hawkins. 31, — —
printer, nf Jubilee Drive. ITT
i-ef Ex-bank manager held
diamonds and £10,000 belong-
■g to British Overseas Airways
°Earlier,° Derek Roy Anderson. ~f 0J* V CflF TClUSCW ttClll
*. of Snowdon Avenue. Hilling- J
r ^CKdf sJS DAILY TELEGRAPH REPORTER
leaded guiltv to stealing AMT tAMSHED PATEL, 42, said to have the “ dubious
:x,
orthwood Hills. Middlesex. the longest tune on recor d —more than a year was
!d John Bramwell Elliott. refused bail at the Old
1. of St Stephen's Road. Bailey yesterday. The inspector said that the
nunslow. pleaded . guilh- to ’ fh . "LL*.!! 1 ,"
beholder. One man’s obscene
articte can be another man’s
nursery reading."
Lost year’s committee had ad-
journed .tine die consideration'
of a postponed judgment con-
function to ” keep them going.”
Ex-bank manager held
for year refused bail
DAILY TELEGRAPH REPORTER
GAM3 JAMSHED PATEL, 42, said to have the “ dubious
® distinction ” of being in custody awaiting trial tor
the longest time on record" — more than a year — was
refused bail at the Old . ~ 7T 7 . ,
Railev yesterday. The inspector said that the
xiaiiey y - j whprpahnnis of Patel in
lO JWIIII IJI aiiinrn A.11IU1W reiuscu I 1 "'* . . ■ j *u-» ,K-
1. of St Stephen's Road. Bailey yesterday. The inspector *?aid that the
nunslow. pleaded guiltv to ■> exact whereabouts of Patel in
nalinn thp diamonds Furdlev Patel, former manager of the Argentinewvie unknown for
cn Pleaded "uiltv to handling London branch of the Central j; 0ine months until he was found
,\TnAn ■ ° notoe »nH Rank of India, is accused with jn thc poo ] He W as then taken
ndersnn^to handling stolen two others of frauds against the ho;! pj ra ( The objection to
10 e bank involving between CTU.U0U 5aU ivas that Tatel was likely
amonds. . “j f JUO.000- He has been in . abscond.
The bearing was adjourned nee July 7 of last year. ^ explanatlon for th „ in ri-
jitil today.
J 7-HOUR DRINKS |ji»>
vOT CONTINUOUS
Jud >e Edward Ci.arke. 0 C. denf Bueno? \ires had been
reolvin' 1 to Mr Kf.nneih Mach in. s i vc „ a nd for his own safety
who ackeri lor bail, said: “This p arp i should be kept in custodv.
iv uu ■ J ■ ■ . . J I ' ■
is an impertinent application aim He un der?tood Patel’s two
it is refused." Fatel is legally ^jiriren were in Jtah and that
x liN LJ v/u3 aided. his wife could not be traced. At
Bv 0«r 1^1 ^vernment Accused wfth l3SS
Correspondent bank V the is«u»» oF documents in Patel's name in Hambura.
A proposal that purporting to be letters of guar- Replying to Mr Mach m. Insp.
' y u V ia £pc shoSkl teTree h to an tee for bills of exchange, are Tavlor said the alleged offences
Jb l,c houses should be tree G Houry. 51. shipping cohered a period of several
‘cu fm fj& n J a 2LS n S£Si a £ cnt - and T0BUS WRCLEB ’ 6K vears *
a.« not achnrann £0 timi u opert3 .. d Pa ie r . They are on He , aw p a rel in the Argentine
-.hour opening. association bj . f af £3 n>noo pach- and exp } a i n pd he was under no
id yeslerday. .. , 5rpn4 » p4 net. Insp. Keith Taylor, of rompu^on to return to England.
A statement said. Licensees nF Lnndon Police. odpo=- ApparenMv the a«ault on him i
*M bc hnifrs within the inc bail for Patel said after ihe wart the only incident of its
opening hours wirnm me i"« of frauds he fied In kind. . ... .
-hnur period l«> t:u ft rncm nisco e > rntinH He w m onor health when
*^1 This would enablejhem he r 3 -r back In this country I
cln«c if the wished ins-lead ot gabbed s a pnol in Buenos and had bren in F-rixl^n Pnson
=, : ng m staff bar? which might rp e t bound in a pnoi ncariv ail the time,
herwise be half empty.’ Aires.
HOTLINE is our unique prescription
for critical delivery dates of export
consignments of 50 kilos or less.
Its special formula ads fast to ease
pressure, relieve bottlenecks, smooth the
flow.
It helps your company service its
overseas customers more promptly and
economically.
Exporting via HOTLINE couldn’t
be simpler.
There's no boqking, no ’phoning, no
waiting for confirmation.
You see, we hold cargo space
available on virtually every BOAC flight
exclusively for HOTLINE packages.
Your consignment goes on the flight
specified by your cargo agent or shipping
manager.
HOTLINE won’t cure all your
problems, but it does offer a quick way out.
mokes the bng haul shorter
MARKET tow in
east PAKISTAN
By PETER GILL in Kashipur
B ANGLA DESH guerrillas have reoccupied an
area of 150 square miles in the Jessore
district of East Pakistan near the frontier with
India. . . . ,
They were earlier driven from these positions to
take refuge in India when Pakistani Array reinforcements
moved from. Jessore Cantonment in April to obliterate
■ ■ pockets of Bengali resist-
QUEEN LINER ance in the border regions
* The guerrillas, in company
6 TIV ' Strength, took two.- days to
jj.* regain their hold on Kashipur,
. nr i . a former East Pakistan Rifles
VC10 passengers were
Skyjack so
■ ood as gold
-S’v'vV
f jf- ‘-vr.-v
exciting.
say
‘ IN GOOD
SHAPE’
By FRANK ROBERTSON
in Hongkong
rnHE former liner Queen
Elizabeth, now in Hong-
kong for refit as a floating
university and cruise 1 ship,
is in “ remarkably -good
shape,” says Mr Kenneth.
Milburn, director of Hong-
kong’s marine department.
border post
Their claim, doubtless exag-
gerated, is that the action cost
the Pakistani troops some 7S
dead and two captured, for the
loss of only one guerrilla junior
officer. .
From Kashipur, guerrilla
groups have destroyed five
bridges over the Fiver Kobadak
which flows round their “libera-
ted "■ zone on three sides.
Lookouts have been posted on
Mr Mitburn, who spent two tJie river “border” to alert
years aboard the ‘Qucea as Kashipur command post of any
first oflicer during her wartime Pakistani Army move either to
dashes across the Atlantic with cross the Kobadak or to threaten
American troops, added: “Lay- the guerrilla position.
men seeing a lot of -rust and Control over the straggling
debris tend to Uunk the old market town of Kashipur
girl is Far gone, but she has appears secure,
many useful years left. Her hull
and main 6 - machinery are • Passport stamped
extrem el y so un Seawise Tn the school bntlding. now
T** e b ncr * r , enan L C i_T^ ria ^ used as company headquarters,
Umversity-aplayontheinmals ^ t Na-zmul Huda, the guer-
oF her rilla sector commander, /nested
™ on stamping my passport on be-
J “ ^ Qfin half of the M Bangla Desh armed
to the s ^J! dar 5® u °i nH ?n 1 ?!! Forces” to demonstrate that I
ISfS if 3™ a“ M TeS ge% S"" red “ inde < ,Mdtnt East
Japan- for dry docking beFore * *
putting to sea again 1 in January.
The classroom and living
Volunteers from among local
students and labourers as well
space for students aod teachers - as U*e . re fyS e e camps
will be segregated from the pas- S*-™* 5 J , . °. rd ir i *’?^ a . r . 8r ®
senders’ part of the huge liner. to 3° in t ^ ,e Mukti Fouj
Students will spend one-term fe“ v h0 " F
aboard and already five Araeri- of forraer Paklstam
can universities have signed up „ . .. :. xr ,
for 1972 cruises. -Capt Huda i said: “Volunteers
r 1972 cruises 6 1 --Cap* said: “Volunteers
are coming in their thousands.
Sentimental streak ■ " ~ Ff nw bad enough training
m-ru.. , -r. -xr establishments, we . . .could be
Mr Mrimini desenoed L. - y. training tens of thousands of
Tung as one of -the- four wealth- 1 them.”
iest shipowners in the world.
The Mukti Fouj company has
“ He has a strong sent! mental amassed an impressive array-
streak and works hard to of stolen weapons from raids,
promote better raterrrabonal They include British mortars
understanding. I think this is and FBren guns, American anti-
his way of putting back, for the personnel mines and French
public good, some of me many rocket launchers
millions he has made from the .« VVe are capUl ' rill g more ft aa
100 or so ships be owes enough weapo P ns S!“
He cannot hope to make said CapL Huda. “In the past
money on this venture, and will few days we have captured
be very lucky indeed to break 50,000 rounds of -303 ammuni-
eveo. tion alone.”
When refitted, the liner will
cruise- on two of her four mam W eaoons^n
_x to weapons, in wwie use oy me
ERL'S AWfeS
W i be ^ € t0 make 16 Guerrilla commanders elsewhere
.U of&lM«" n P chm h “ rcslriDted tteir
down, each with 700ft. of heavy .
four -inch steel cable. . ® u ^. sa V that the Indian
By JAMES ALLAN
in Rome
A LAST AIR WILSON, 14,
leaned back in his seat
oa the VC-10 yesterday and
broke off playing with a
plastic ship building kit to
say: “Gee, that really was
an exciting end to term.
The delay’s been worth-
while.”
He was one of 18 children set-
ting out again from Heathrow,
via Rome, for summer holidays
with their Families in Kenya and
Tanzania after their early morn-
ing skyjacking over Libya.
Despite the incident and lack
of sleep, there were no signs of
tiredness or anxiety among the
children or indeed the rest of
the 74 passengers on board.
There was some slightly ner-
vous laughter, however, when
the pilot announced he was
going to have to circle around.
Rome. “Who is skyjacking us
now? ”, one asked.
Bishop companion
Alastair, a hoarder at Abbots- . T
holme School, Derbyshire, who A i M
was travelling with his sister -L N WH*
: Merinda, 13 next week, talked ■
excitedly of how the earlier flight nnnrkiniii
suddenly disturbed by a loud- fj F,FOR Ml IWi
speaker announcement saying . V Aiiiui 1 V:
they bad to land m Benghazi.
“I knew the Sudan President A T TC? f T'
was on board and the Libyans IAJL/1 J3 JL
Were taking him off,” he said. -
“The captain of the plane talked „
to the Anglican bishop who was By NORMAN KIRK HAM
sitting alongside me and 1 could Diplomatic Staff
hear bits of conversation.” m ^ „
He added: “I am looking jL T - ^ L
forward to getting back to my - NGOR, 01, is a socialist
parents in Dar-es-Salaanx and who wants an ambitious
tell them about it. Of course it programme of reform in the
will be a good story for the -Sudan, a • country which
boys at school next term.” .• ■ bas r been struggling with
Mr John Whitfield, a plastics widespread economic prob-
company director who lives in leii!S and growing unrest
Nairobi, said of the childrens •„ ... , _ • •
behaviour during the inadent: He denies beiug a member
“They were great. Everyone of the Communist Party and
was as good as gold.” advocates “scientific socialism,”
Mr W. A. Waodbv, a magiy but indications are that
trate in Mombasa, praised the f n . administration under h.s
VC-10 captain’s handling of the leadership would be extremely
situation. “ It could have had le ft-wing.
quite a different ending. 1, think Col Al-Noor became an inside
we- were lucky,” he said. ’ figure i« the political power.
Editorial Comment PJL4 game in the Sudan in the last
few years, after a. military, career
" 1 whidi spanned more than 15
Malta refused to ye £ was commissionei) as an
7 - _ j infantry officer and studied mili-
Let plane land taf y intelligence in Sussex. He
i was senior general staff officer
t»_ it a i»r\T n oTvini’ for Northern Command in the
By HAROLD bit Vis, Su<Jan bcfore being seconded to
In Valletta the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
SLEAFOBD. W. F. ■&***»* Ltd- 10>
12. Srnthgate.
SPALDING. Dodson Brot Lti, Slain
Road Garace, Pinchbeck- -
STAMFORD. S. H. Senlee Station,
u rtin aloo Road.
London
u.1. Allan Bri5s> Aioiora Lid, 47-51,
Uucelerd Mount Road.
You-il find the telephone “JJ*. H MMrs - M * “ sh sa ’
number under - Car distributors „S d Gre “ C "’
. . ,f .i-_ Ynllaw N-W.l. North Leaden Coach works
and dealers in the fellow L i fli . Eaodeiph Street.
j, WX Moreland Motors Ltd,
i Papes ti'rcidey Road,
i s K.wj. Con line rial Motor Centra, 43-
i jiedfnrdsliire j^a. & Kirby Ltd., 554
BKDFORD Kendrick Motors, lo* CirUe. ^ ^
D UNSTABLE. "Attan JJ«re Ltd.. S.EU. HuC
^ JSJBT ilotore . LUL * ^
Park Street. s ™ j xormaos of Westminster Ltd..
Berkshire _ . _ 1! u; Fulham Road.
K A KINGDOM All JsauU? service | w ^ pride * Clark Ltd., loo. Stock-
£i,j!°’NitOuO- »!«.«. 1270, Loa-
SflDBIBub. K W. B Hammaat dun Bead. & g Carage LuL> ^
p&GBOURNb!* P Auto care Ltd.. j^fj^Badbonnse Racing Ltd, la,
, iKrtML ra Ed 6 BiU Ltd, Chatham OarraAM ^
Si. Building, Eaton Place, IL'Grove, Hell and Paris.
READING. iL C. R- Sales. SJuofiekl bou™^ e ”™ L ” t( , n Car CecLra, 151-135,
ru^TmiM H. Le«Ier Cars Ltd., Warwick . ..
THATCH AM- H. Letter Cars Ltd,
B.ilti Rd.. TiialCh«a. Nr. Nei wb\ ury-
WANTAGE. Metiers of Challow Lid,
WINDSOR- Andrews of Windsor,
JJu, St Leonards Bd. ■
Middlesex
ENFIELD. Elrnsieigh Autos ol Ep.
field ’Ml Lancaster Road.
HAMPTON HILL-
Ltd, 7-11. Windnull BoatL
STAINES. Gavin Fajriax Ltd, Shep-
I mm
■ ’r. *7
ATLESBUK1\ 1 Waltoo 1 ?treet Garage, ^KtON? 1 ^ ’SperdwS' Garage. High
Udlicii Street. , ■- L. street -
BEACONSFIELD. Maunce Leo Ltd, ^^£yS*UKV. Concorde Garagea
1.7. Gregory’s JRd- ..j- Windsor Road.
BLBTCHLEY. Abbeys Senlce Sto., Lid, iyioo.oi ..
• Milton Jkryncs Co-op Soc. Ltd.J, MonmoBUishlre
WhaditM VtA\ NEWPORT. Evans & Cox Motora
BOURNE END. Gaylors Garages Ltd. Ltii Rodney Rd.
BRILL. Cook's of Brill Ltd.. ChutTh Merefordshlre
Street. • Brill. Nr. Aylcsburj'. HEREFORD. GodseUs Ltd, Fownhope.
DENHAM. Denham Motor Sales
Ltd, Oxford RoaiL Norfolk . .
Setting off again from Heathrow Airport yesterday
after their adventure in a BO AC VC 10 airliner
which was forced to land at Benghazi where Lt.-Col.
Babikr Al-Noor, Sudan’s new military leader, and
an aide were kidnapped. Joanne (left) and Caroline
Awart, were bound for Lusaka, Zambia, and T Jigel
(right) and Simon Birks, were going to Dar-es-
Salaam. Tanzania.
LiLtl., L'UUru nuuu- . , c •
HAZLEMJERE. Curries Garage Ltd-, AYL5HAM. Walt Bros, Norwich Ha.
Hartemere Cross Boads Service Sta- Dl ss. Prelt>' Bros, Dis* Road, ^coie.
tion. w „ . GORLESTOX ON SEA. Gorlestou
HIGH WYCOMBE. Wycombe Marsh Garage, 1. Victoria Road.
Garages Lid, ■J7fW88, Loud 00 Rd. GREAT YARMOUTH. Cluers Cars,
SLOUGH. South Bucka Garsuies Ltd, south Dene* Road. . ,
134-lGti, Bath Road. Salt -H i ll. JONGS LYNN. Hill & Osborne Ltd.,
Cambridgeshire H^sf^sborne 6 Ltd, St. G*rmair=.
CAMBRIDGE. Matoney *: Rhodes NORWICH- Grahams Genista & Co,
L,d " ! *jiL-B tri> u Bo ,:j -j- Eagle Garage, Newmarket Roa<L
CAMBRIDGE. Moss Ltd, 146, Hills kOKWICH. Pointer Motor Co. Ltd,
ELY. C. B. Grey Ltd, St Mary's 6oHWirn R \Voodland Car Sales Ltd,
t.,a: _
MARCH. Station Road Garage.
WISBECH. Holmes & Barnard Ltd.,
bullou Road.
C arm a r Uicns hi re
NORWICH. Pointer Motor Co. Ltd,
Avlsham Road. ' ' -
NORWICH. Woodland Car Sales Ltd.,
Salhouse Road.
Northamptonshire
KETTERING. Grady Bros, Britannia
Road.
ca^ktSS^Smo,.,*. n, L “ L -
Lammas Slicet.
Channel Islands
KINGSTHOKPE. BecHve Garage Ltd,
Sl-ns. Harboroagh Road.
-- r 0 * v^-- Vk
.. “ C, -^Jj
a
ST. LAWRENCE. Hcory- Linloo- Cars RU5HDE.V. Palace Motors. Alfred St.
lid., Victoria Av«, St- Lawrence. WELLINGBOROUGH. Frank Cook,
jci -er. Broad Green.
ST. SlARTTNS. Forest Road Garage Nolting hams hire
Ltd, Forest Road. St. Martin*, bBESTON. - Stewart HaU Ltd, Lilac
FALMOUTH. Avenue Road Garage, Anneslev Road.
Grove Garage, Lilac Grove. .
HUCKNALLv Frank Sisson. o>4-«.
Avenue Road.
NEWARK. Elliots Ltd.. Sleaford Rd.
Cotswold Garage, Lambs NOTTINGHAM. Blacknell
Barn Son-Ice Station.
padstow. J. C. Tresoning ft Son,
Now StrccL
ST. IVES. Pj rc- A n-Creet Garage. •
Devon
BARNSTAPLE-- The Holfowtree
Garage Ltd, Newport Road.
Ltd, 301. Arkwright Street.
NOTTINGHAM. H. Johnson Ltd, 249,
Sherwood Street. ,
WELLOW. G. S. &-D. J. .Yeardley.
Endeavour Garage, Nr. Newark.
Oxfordshire ,
JB ANBURY. County Gars^e Cocoa-
Mi . . .
The stewardesses who were aboard the airliner.
They are (from left): Ji Ilian Peebles, of London,
•- Susan-- Lucas, of Wraysbury, Bucks, and Wilma
Grainger, of London.
U.S. fears Israeli peaee
rebuff to divided Arabs
night was refused permis- ary Command Council of Geo. RICHARD BEESTON in Washington
sj°n to land at Malta on Humeiry, wjm seized power in A MERICAN officials are deeply pessimistic about .
the unusual grounds that a coup in 1969, Col Al-Noor later Za , F . ,„; oc f rtri - , Mr . w D ,
the plane was over Libya took over as assistant Prime the prospects of the peace mission by Mr Joseph
at the time of the request, f or AiTairs Sisco, Secretary of State, to Israel next week because of
it wa S learned yesterday. -and Mlnis.er of Plann ing. , he current turmoil in the
BRITONS TO
S e a orimi “ >«* do ’™ K o«".l“S fed C tended to try to persuade RECEIVE £2 III
at tiengnazi. pressing the freedom of the IsraeL to make concessions to v^a-ia t xj
EXETER. Dunns Motors Ltd, Blade- ental. Banbury.' ..
bov Road. HENLEY ON THAMES. Bell Street
NEWTON ABBOT. Quay Garage A Motors Ltd- A6. Bell Street-
Eoii. Work *. -Quay Road. HOOK NOJETON. Firs Garage. Nr.
PLYMOUTH. G. P. R. Motor Sales Banburv.
Lid, 24, Western Approach, Grty OXFORD. J. D. Barclay Ltd- 242-234,
Outre. Banbury Road. _
PLYMOUTH. Plym Garage, 7fl, WWNEY. Continental Cars Ltd- The
Beaum ont Rd, St. Jndds. Crofts.
SFOMOUTH. Central Garage, Cross- Pemhinknhirf
ways, Sidiord. CARDIGAN. . B. V. Bees, Abbey
Dorset ~ ' Garage, SL Dogmaels.
DORCHESTER. R. J. Watts & Son -Somerset
let plane land
By HAROLD SIEVE
in Valletta
rr»HE B 0 A C VO10
A forced down at
Benghabi on Wednesday
night was refused permis-
sion to land at Malta on
the unusual grounds that
the plane was over Libya
at the time of the request,
it was learned yesterday.
Assistant premier
A member of the Revolution-
ary Command Council of Geo.
Humeiry, who seized power in
a coup in 1969, Col Al-Noor later
Ltd, Auto House, High SL, Fording- BATH _ independent Motors. Prior
™S>.S^ S «.
agSf'a. r,?““ Be,ch BKlCToj! pgine Ud.. ™-72e.
ffES,. v - r - *■ <=•■ SlEBRBt oS^im mu Ud..
Ud., High street. 59-61, CoHwm HilL Bristol ES9 IER.
Essex BRISTOL. Ian D. Swift Garages Ltd.,
BRENTWOOD. Grange Motors T-»d , 56. Redc liffe StrccL
Brook Street. . M1NEHEAD. Minebeod . Service Sta-
CHADWELL HEATH. Lester Motors Hon. Townsend Road.
Lid, 250-256. High Rd.
TAUNTON. Dunns Motors Ltd, East
CHELMSFORD. Cambridge . Motors Street- • , ^
of Chelmsford Ltd, SpringBeld Rd. WESTON SUPER MARE. W. L. Ger-
tx ACTON-ON-SEA. Redrujw Gone man Ltd, 108-110. Milton Road.
Lane, Burrsvllle Park. " YEOVIL. Dunns Motors Ltd., Sber-
FRATLNG. Tally Ho Garage. Main Rd. Worae Road.
FRtNTON-ON-SEA. PoUendine Motors
Ltd, Connaught Ave.
HAD LEIGH. L. F. Page Motors,
545. London Rd.
Staffordshire
BURTON ON . TRENT. All Saints
Motors Ltd, All Saims Road.
CHASET0WN. Buxn two ori • Contin-
- HUTTON. Hutton Garages Ltd, 661, ental Ltd, High Street, Chasetown.
'•■'’iSiS? . • . _ _ _ LEEK. Robin Hood Garage, Rustaton
ILFORD -G’ Autos, Highbury Spencer.
^ NEWCASTLE. B. S. M arson A Sons.
LOUGBTON. Cbureh mil Garage, Deansgate Garage. Keel Road,
„ - - „ 1 1 STAFFORD. Walton Garage Ltd,
1UU1-1UVU OITO LflUlG. A . a . . - - , ' preSSlUg LUC IlCCUOUI (JI LUC 4.31 a** L LU UiOJVC LVI I K.W
Too big for Hongkong bar- £ rm v ractory at Libyan air space comes under people. Egypt over America’s pro-
bour, she is anchored in deep p® n ? J A; in .™ e « ate g , u «f5 Malta’s air control, which makes M ,: nr F , rn . l1{ Hamadullah posed interim settlement
water several miles off H ™SdH 0 „ iS ForThl, llf ‘<>SS2S !l.r/LJ , ja.2!? ,eu1t “ " nder - wh“T, r s SL?r“*i: Which envisages the reopen-
pressing tne ireeaom or me
people.
Major Farouk Hamadullah,
OM» HARLOW. E. J. Darlington
Ltd, Station Road.
Walton.
STOKE ON TRENT. Platts Garage
Egypt over America’s pro- ™ A1 , 1 rrV'TFT
posed interim settlement fjhLvIJjl KItY r 1
SOUTHEND-ON-SEA. Belle " Vue' Ltd, Ligbtwood Rd, Long ton.
Motors Ltd., 460-464, SouLhchnrdi Rd. Victloria^Gmvtfe .. iHanlevl
Gtamorganshlre
Victoria Garage .. iHanleyl Ltd.,
Victoria Road, Hanley.
western entrance.
UNION ATTACK
ON EUROPE’S
LORRY HOURS
By MICHAEL GREEN
Industrial Staff
pLANS to bring the hours
x of Britain’s lorry drivers
into line with Common Mar-
ket regulations were
vigorously attacked by the
Transport Union, yesterday.
Mr Ken Jackson, national
flecretary for haulage workers,
said Continental regulations
were "impracticable and stupid."
The union’s objection to
adopting the rules of the Six
on hours stems From the fact that
while the number of hours a
driver is allowed to sit at the
wheel in a day is limited to
eight, there is no limit on the
Continent to total number of
hours the man can work.
In Britain the daily limit be-
hin dthe wheel is 10 hours. This
has to be within a span o fl2§
hours, only 11 of which must
be "work.**
Brussels talks
Transport Union leaders are
going all out to change the inter-
national rules, ana thus the
Common Market’s , through the
International Transport Federa-
tion. The union will press the
ITF to adopt its recommends- (
tion for an initial limit of 10 j
hours on the " total working
day” and for this to be brought
down to nine hours at a later
date. .
The union moves are being
made against the background oF
basic acccntance by Britain in
recent talks in Brussels that
hours .of British lorry and coach
drivers should be limited to
eight a dav. The phasing in of
the regulations is, however, still
being negotiated.
Britain is pressing fnr a four-
year transitional period while
the Six say two years are suffi-
cient.
There is some considerable
criticism that Continental
drivers who bring thrir lorries,
over to Britain are flouting
hours regulations altogether. -
Laws broken
A spokesman for the Road
Haulage Association. which
represeats 8.QQQ private firms in
Britain, said yesterday that
there was evidence, that foreign
drivers “ did not adhere very
strictly to our taws.”
It was difficult to check what
driving they have none in
Britain. ,
The RHA spokesman said:
“There is a's° ? Ue P^'Cm of
making n rosecutions stick. B y
the time you want thn man to
a noear in court he s oack on the
Continent.” . - • -.
ammunition for the Chinese
AK47 automatic riflet
Indian rifles
At Kashipur several guerrillas
were armed with 7-62 auto-
matic rifles which are exclu-
sively manufactured in India.
Moving away from the Paki-
stani border, my car was halted
by an Indian Army patrol oper-
ating in defiance of the Indo-
Pakistan border regulation say-
ing that regulars must not
approach within' five mries of the
frontier.
Further back, on the road, but
also wjtb in the five-mile zone,
were Indian Army trucks draw-
ing heavy guns.
“What we are achieving at
the moment is tremendous,”
said Capt. Huda. “We are tieing
down the Pakistani Army in
the border areas so that our
guerrillas in the interior can
have a free hand.
“ We have some troops here
who are capable of waging a
conventional war against tbe
Pakistanis, but our manpower
is limited. We can ili-afford
casualties among our best
soldiers."
INDIAN SUPPORT
Mortars fired on border
Our Staff Corresponobxt in
Dacca cabled: The Indian Air
Force fired 90 Four-inch mortars
around tbe border village of
Lathi Tilia, south of Sylhct. on
Wednesday to assist Bangla
Desh guerrillas, it was learned
yesterday.
Ad Indian spotter aircraft first
flew over the area, violating the
Indo-Pakistani frontier agree-
ment. Most bombs fell wide of
their targets, and only two
Pakistani soldiers were wounded. '
Bangla Desh guerrillas are
again intensely active along the
frontier in the valleys between
Dh arm ana gar, India, and
i Khowai, south of Sylhet. They
are harassing the Army and
straining its resources to guard
the rich tea-growing area.
fi 600 MURDERS ’
Bonsali rebels have “assas-
sinated ” at least 600 peace
committees’ members in East
Pakistan since the middle of ■
April. Prof. Ghuiam Azam, a
Central peace Committee mem-
ber, claimed in Dacca, it was re-
ported yesterday. Mr Azam is
the head of J^maat-Islam the
orthodox Moslem party.— A P.
ctnnrf Ml*, rpfrical w,,a Tva: ’ av.LUiiiuoimiiK wi m-
*“*■ Noor on the flight to Khartoum, mg of the Suez Canal.
Neither Mr Dorn MmtofF, the j s another soldier turned politi- The Libyan skyjacking oF the
Maltese Pnme Minister, nor any dan who lost his post as Interior new Sudanese leader and the
member of the pro-Libyan Lab- Minister in November. mid-air evolosion oF an Irani
CARDIFF. Italian Cars LML. 119, City WALSALL. Beaton Gibbons IM„
our Government, was consulted
on tbe derision, I am told.
MALTA DEMAND
MAY BE £20m
DEFENCE RENT
Revolution betrayed
He has said that the coup was
designed to achieve the revolu-
tion which was being betraved
by Gen. Numeiry. Maj. Hama-
dallah also has strong left-wing C °!.f p 1 f.'
sympathies. VYash "
mid-air explosion of an Iraqi
plane flying to the Sudan, it is
feared, will only confirm I he
Israeli belieF that new conces-
sions are pointless while the
structure of the Arab world
appears to be in a slate of
By JOHN RIDLEY
Diplomatic Staff
JiJGVPT has agreed to pay
Britain more than two
million pound; compensa-
tion tor British properties
nationalised under Presi-
dent Nasser, it Was an-
nounced in Cairo yesterday.
West Bromwich Rnad.
WOLVERHAMPTON. A. N. Btoxham
SWANSEA. GT an field Lawreoca Ltd.,- * e tL® lo ’2£ in
11-15 Prioecvs Way ^ Ltd., W*rttoow Service Station, Wot 1 *-
stones Road. Penn.
Glonmlerstalre
CHELTENHAM. Baytree Garage Ltd., „ Snr . re ? c .
Hie<i St.. Pwitniry. ; CROYDON. Carrs Auto Services LtcL,
CHELTENHAM. Lccidiampton Motors Standard House. South End.
Ltd.. 172, Leckhampton Rn" DORKING. Val Knapp Ltd., 40. Wert
COLEFOBD Wood Rate Cars, Cole-
toid. ■ ■ EGHAM. MaraneUo Concessionaires
GLOUCESTER. Mead A Tomkiasoo 5 hl IS5 y " Pa ^ T ^ „
L:d.. Mo. Westgate Sti EPSOM. E£tom Garages Ltd.. 55,
SIW-ON^THE-WOU).. Bicester Ltd.,
Park StrccL
Washington sees Ihe action
The agreement was initialled TETBURY. Hampton Garage Ltd.
of in Cairn by Mr Sherif Loutfi. Hampion street
FARNHAM. Heath Bros. Ltd.. 61-83,
East Sired.
GUILDFORD. , John Morgan Ltd..
the Libyans as absolutely typical Under Secretary of State at the SSi *P.‘ Glow- Burnham Scr Stn " LMdon Road *
StftMVuSJSfa? J«?SS the im pulsive, head strong Ministrv of B^noVy -ml For! R « d «*"»*■
op nosed CoL Al-Noor for tus pr<v behj , viour of CoJ Gaddafi, the rign Trade, and Mr W. F. nis ,v rsw ? a » hlTe
W *. . . u'.iinTiuui oi L«Vi UDU\IDH. UIG • • W'ai ■
#» An, tw.r» r . . Coinmumst sympaLbies. It was Libyan leader, demonstrated Morris, head
By Oar Defence Correspondent he who brought tmn re on carlicr this month in his action parrmrnt of
Burptiiim.
HIND HEAD. : Beacon HOI Garage
Ltd-. Churl Road.
Lord Carrington, Defence Gen. Numeiry to curb the power
Secretary, yesterday reported to of Communists in the Sudan,
the Cabinet on his talks with He sees the spread of Com
over the Moroccan coup.
He is seen as a fiery Nationa-
list capable of sudden and faulty
of iv <w D,: *=■" * Sim! ud - >■
L "J^.r_ ,F, “ n and Brian G “hby Ltd:, NEW MALDEN. Lajdler Motor Co.
Cummonvoali h Office.
The agreement differed from
Lid.. fiS. Coombe Rd.
it- w;_,-d: ‘ , , * , .. ,|a i wk«oic in miuuuh dim lounv t: ' - . — i ,
iSLtS^ 2S&L mumsm in the Sudan as a threat judgments, but at the same time " {hci * governments, in that jjfr «*■»■*■
settlements made with several | Bournemouth. Majestic Garage
WWtehJn Service LUL, RE1GATE. Priory Park Ser. Stn.,
nniicniii, w«t
demanding £20 million a year Egypt
rent for defence facilities in the
island in place of the present £S
million a year in development 5
aid. Yesterday’s Cabinet meet-
ing was expected to produce By G
counter-proposals to Mr Min- pivi
toff’s demand. thr >
5 DIE IN TUNNEL
By Our Geneva Correspondent a friend of Gen. Numeiry . and
t- , approved nF his recent mnvrs lo
throw out leading Sudanese
Soviet penetration. .ommission reported to br set [f > d RT ^ 1 | : t c r0el Hu ^ Of
up bv an Order in Cnunol with- 5i%3sirn«»» 3 nil 1 j
Eirvntian snspicinns ' n -.f' 1 .** nc>,i t ihrcr mnnihc, SdU>hui>- Kd. 1 '■ W1>0
S. P susp L.iajms are expert cd from Southampton, h. g.
Col Gaddafi considers himself 1,400 Britons, and an a<l hoc
a friend of Gen. Numeiry. and rommitlce i»F shareholders of
iwijtcniu. West Street,
sps ::::: z::
gospokt. ffiSSKSr- iflSSk ! nctaeera ’
PDRTCHESTEC. Huxford and Son ^ 0 MUNDS ■ Bury SL
Ud.. West Street. Motor €0., ■ RMldentwll Rd.
RING WOOD. Rinsvi-ood Car Sales I‘ Carneys and Hill. Fuchsia
SjlJ>hurv Kd, * L,anc.
SOUTHAMPTON. H. G. Dobbs Ltd. JT^IPH- Rcvctts Ltd.. SL Margarets
ll-VlLi. Lodge Roitl. *
WINCHESTER. Wjkchaia Motors ^ Wa ^cney Garages,
"TS- Ih* Britain
might be prepared to pay up to coach train was derailed in the ^
£10 million a ’‘ear. but a stum- Simplon Tunnel. Twenty-Four "■ . „
bliog block is Mr Klin toffs winh other workers were injured. The . 7.“* Lgvpf ran Gntcrnmenj is
rommitlce i»F shareholders of ud^SLuiSn^Hill"^ 'i^eham Motors Wavercv Drive!
I he alfccled companies will be needham niai
convened in Londmi shortly mnnnnr-.Y,SS . . 2a-o0. High Strr
convened in London «horMy aRoxiouME fiSSukk . ,
Negotiations have speeded up Rruxbonnrc Lid.f uje prertne?*
since President Sadal cainc to HARfenoen*. Puttoill Bros. Ltd-
power. Poih countries were hatfield 1 ’ » ~ .
NEEDHAM MARKET. Turners Ltd..
23-o0, High Street
axvious lo reach a serijement "555, ^V l ,rt R By-p°t. rWa ®' North
„ Sussex
SEA. Cooden Eagineer-
in a Co. Ltd., Coodaa.
WH'sSreeL™' Kp hh Vkkers Ltd..
BOi.NEY. G. A W. Motors Lid..
Oling OlOCK IS Mr Auntott S Winh other workers were injurea. me —J ; 1 u hefn re the visit in Cairn in ^n. Vfw sievre 'V'l,. BOI.NEY. G. A W. Motors Ltd
to exclude Other Nato nations main line between Switzerland believed to have Seen equal iv . . f nonclas^ GreStidJ^ ’parade cm? R? iraTow°A LcDt ' n ' 1 Rp9d - : ’
from automatic use of the facifi- and Italy was closed for five ^S‘ S n ° F llSnc. MnAn. ^ ^srov t CTESEf SSffi' M ° tor Ufl *
ties given to Bntam. hours. Sffv ^tlhSS" is^mv in Khartoum SSPBJSe ffiSSs l ^"SSS 0
_ lt-l I.: I? r- S.llVRR'DGEll'Airra LZlS Pre«trn Road.
2,000 held in crushing
of Jordan guerrillas
By RONALD PAYNE in Cairo
TORDAN Government officers have begun interrogating
w 2.300 Palestine Guerrillas renor+ed held in rnnmn-
a high ranking Egyptian Gov-
ernment drfe^atinn whnw. real
purpn<!c is believed tn be a fact-
finding mission for Cairo.
The explosion of the Iraqi
plane earning a government
mission lo the Sudan is thmrsht
In have been the work of dissid-
ent Iraqi elements.
Iraq and Syria are the two
countries who arc ideologically
WAR UNLIKELY *...
>.ninr. Llrt.. Bril.mma Rnad.
BETWEEN LIBYA m^aJSS^SSS,, Ul ,
Lincoln Rn.'d. ‘
•AND SUDAN &SFbSr v<1,ky LM -
By Our Defence Correspondent east cowrsl Borons h h Halt Motor?
^'SS RTHi john - &
JVA' THAM CROSS. Britannia C™«
RUNTED. Buxtorf Motors. Hlch
^tocct. Nr. ti ck Reid.
Crn-C HESTER. Blue Star Garages
Huntingdonshire CmC HESTER. Blue star Garatrea
PETERBOROUGH. Petcrcarv Ltd. 4 Ltd— N orth pp.tr.
Lincoln Rn„-d. *• rRAWLEY. Tinevs I^dL, TUgate Sar.
ST. IVES. On«c Valley Motors I trf 5| n~ A riidown Drive.
! S:. it ion Road. • *ors i-ra.. rsirreoiiovt? w-
ITnrtilitirs between l.ibva anil
Ihe Sudan are uniikelv lo m<uif
Ltd., o -borne Garage, York Road.'
RASTROURNE. pokficld Motors Ltd.,
1-5. Scaririe Rood.
EAST C*r«S7BA».. Sarjseirt A
n-onker Ltd.. North End, East
^rinttoad. 1
R A1LSRAM. Peter parka Racing
ciiuiim I'.o «IIII ni t- mu*nii;ii tin.i mi- .111111:11 nil- UlllinriV IU I C-i_- , M X7V--,«. r i,
closest 10 the. pro-Communists From > rsicrd.iv’s kidnapping of E p..’iari imc: ' Vwns Ltd - hors ham. wii”^ pn^r.:
in the Sudan. l.l Col Al-Nuor. 'Ihe two CANTEMURY. Bli-ii Bros Ltd
Middle F.nrt experts in Wash- cminlrirs are . entres of pnpula- On»*r ajrreL
ington h-lie^e thai tht Israelis scparaicd by ihe Sahara o« roid Dr0ke Ltd -
will now quest ion F resident ’ ’ c ' r ' rl rfn d both are militorih Koofsciuy. ’ fontso-dy Serriro
Sadat's own future and nrft linprcpareil lur \*ar. Siation. High Sirrot.
2,300 Palestine guerrillas reported held in con cen-
tra tion camps after last week’s clashes with the Jordan
Army-
The guerrillas, flashed out a really effective force in ter
from the wooded hills around of fighting against Israel. Hrq
ho^shaM. Wil-ort Porvcs, Brighton
Rood.
FOUND HILT*. Hubert FUr-hartls
womjcTdn sp r . s+0 o-ntiiF-i- £35:
■F- OX %EA. SL
The guerrillas, flashed out a effective force in terms to pros? America for mom The Sudaucsp Anuv of 26,500 A '' tl Ltd.. 171,
from the wooded hills around or fighting against Israel. Hope- hmnhcrs wilhont nfTrring men is heavily occupied with grayesend. Mamins Cara~e sn
Jerash, are now held in a desert less spirts among rival innvc- concessions over n pull-bnck I he prolonged rebellion among b.iisicweii uoan. “ * '
camp at Mafrak in eastern Jor- ments paralysed rtieir capability. from <j UCK Cnnal. iho Chrislian irib.>nre„ 0 F the f7 A,nsT ? NS - U"»*n Motors, 23,
KOOTSCJUy. ’ Fontscray Sen-iro LM - "niV Green.
Siation. High Slrr-r*:. W Ttii-Tiurct Ltd
fill.l.l.vriHA.M, Autovucbts Ltd. 171 L nnr**tf>.«,
I’fc-r r... -1. nu -WWwa Parkway Motors LhL..
(ran VG«Kn u ^ _ __ S»THon Tjnn ■
Hen La no.
Wsnri<-kRhIrp
dan and at Army headquarters AI Fa{ah| b y Yasser
at Irbid in the north. Arafat, was probably the most icnApn DISTRUST
7'he Army estimates that only substantial force. Rut Georse ** l '
200 armed men remain in the HabbasYs Poru'ar Front fnr the 27 coups in 21 years ii'piors h.-jpington' r>! nMTs*Mr. i,w tm Automohaes
hills belween ' Ajlouii and the Liberation of Pa!es.i«, a lairly ^rr in Mr For- h.,s »«., |t Kl S* V SSS--
River Jordan. . , . Icfi-win* grouo and Lawat AJch’s ; vpn rol!,hn ' r s ? cn ® ak9 Mn, ^s ^- n r 6m.11
T . . . . .. . . nonular D'emoo-atic Front which J^nKalem eaWcs. The Uidnrip* irancnorts am! br'iepplpr-: Hire JfcpVUV-I? r,,,r - r DVF'-~rifY Frettnn« n r rA,%, n M
It isrtie last scattered remnant ^™r Wrp^uc r ronr \vmrn or Ll . nn , A | AW j,.is Arm. nf M non mm hna nei ,i 1 ^ Tunm n i 0 « ! stSS
of a guemna force which only b "* Wth prompted Israeli n!Tiri a .s in Psk: remiverf ifie BrilH. rhiHtoi, '<£*#*&* Tank.,
JVSvcV? and ffireSSt' WhT”l? bSSme of Ihe ilT^ “ How enn we entru,t Israel's tanks ordered , wo . -.. rs *
aggressive noises and threaten- cu "'“f a ™, smirity In people who rhange. lircause nr p.ilili, .<1 cmtoi,|n r n.
gj" -erffirowthe Jerdan d^ndhy Wa7fi their regime all the time? " rion^ahmy ih, ; rn„ P biin C in 2 ^
••eicralen-hln* r
IV*. \-]p«inng Pr.id Bri-uioli V ' rn ‘ N
MF.ITDN MOWBr ' Y I w rZ e- He
Manf- Gdrasr. Mitt S’rnpt ’ Tin *' ,cr ' n - *■ * - rinto-
ICirtdTiiv iriiL 2: ''ri. «ni-u
I ra-^rrvrrTON , 5 p»
TM. TTrtl Rna d Sonneficld
Samoa Stn.
rTw-XVV™* B H. Burrows
6,750,000 REFUGEES
By Our Political Staff
There are now over 6,750,000
Pakistani refugees in India. Mr
Richard Wood, Minister for
Overseas. Development, said last
night in a Commons written
answer. The Indian Government
estimated that ,the_ cost of keen-
ing them For six months would
be. £187 million.
Tcf. lhn tou-.h Jordanian Prune ™ e '' Mi.it sincr
Hopeless splits ‘ Mini^’c*-. not at all di"- ]■ .’^.^"isb V Nra-'i
^ * ■ ■ iressM hy attocks on his action c^mc into bring, the- have Wn
\Mien I drove up the Jordan -From other parts of the Arab ^ V J y r ' rr Y , - P u ' r n ■ 1 'i' ' ri,h
1 1 ov r oarl-nr in thL ur h Ml- wnr-Wl. World And »h| rfi filMml.
valley' earlier in the vre**k heavy
machine guns within sisht of Ihe
river were atl pointing away
work).
He. an pounced earlier that
In -the lrf.-d. 10 dav? ihrro had
1" Fedaveen would be' been nftrmptod crup^ in Ihr
from Israel and at tbe hills cast al'nwed to "0 on oporihn-c
of the Jordan. a tain--: the rjiem»*. put he would
By then it was already obvious not tnleralr .torriro u^ p ’1
that guerriila power in Ihe as a h-i.to hv ni?n who were
countrv had been completely more rnrtnisi.iri'c abnui hber.*-
broken. - . - tin 3 Amman Ifiap m freeing the
Ycin'*n. froiiWe with ihr Kurds
1 ho Government in Mower
lHfin.
RUSSIAN EXraXEI)
Ry Our Accra (.'nrrespondent
Mi- G. Pnl-.-mkin. an officiul nt
%>■ Lid,
nil.
■ Tinkler,
' . w^r*»- n
areireny ro<.mr i ri,h B m. T .
n~. i.m . erto- *-a ’^ lnr Mctftr
wrw®: ;*b£, — notoc. ud-
boaton. KtSFBgZ Ltd.. Hom - «■ J* Balne-N
. . SWINPOW. T. H. Whito Motor.- 1 >4 .
The guerrillas never did form 1 occupied territoriej.
1 "'jnnO'i'hle for en-urin 1 ;
saFcty of their borders.
!,«• had -hP,.,; f'-.u-jiu hi Br*P,r. C r., p .V lr ^^' a Motors
ariivilirs iiicnnuMliliie null hr, L«>fiiN 1., o , Cin L w.. 300.
^I.llujj 111 Ghana " He wo* to be si?vTun£il£r Li "i" ,n .
expelled yesterday.
Brumby Sarvtte
Gjl Lid., IS7-I53. Ashby Rd.
T. H. WhpP Motors" t
C??rd Ran. Wom ton S?rack
W..rr.csicrsblrp
r«siiss , RVad. B, ' shts Gara * e ’ chei -'
L£f < a S e Sleo? rl ‘“ J ^ P JtotaP3
I
The DaUff Telegraph, FrUag, Jalg_S3^7S7t |j
The secret of the 724 is a total
conception of performance . handling ,
safety, space and passenger comfort
And it means quite simply that whichever
car you choose in the Fiat 124 range ,
price for price you won't find a better
car- anywhere.
The secret of the 7 24 is Italian
engineering genius harnessed to sheer
honest- to -goodness practicality. Finding
reflection in classic Italian styling which
makes no compromises with the whims
of fashion.
>Ir
The secret of the 724 is a way
of fife. With such civilised refinements
as reclining front seats, flow-through
ventilation, a device for intermittent
windscreen wiping, alternator, cigar
lighter and anti-theft device standard
throughout the range.
mi
*85
'■"Hr
then
fc
version &
Fiat 124 Sport Coupe 1600
5?sl
.V;;£
hr
m
m
' r »- — ‘
r v-
Fiat 124 Sport Coupe 1400
wmm
?>Vj
•gj'-A-
S’.*:*:
mm
BKSt.'V*. q»ssr
- T X'> .■
.;*>■-***
fill
•Vr?
tevyl
• •• ».rr-:vr
-•.vrr
SI
$
ifi
V#?
•*-1
5#
. ->v
.. y->-:
77?e secret of the 724 is also a way
of living. AH cars in the 124 range have
_ dual circuit servo-assisted disc brakes all
round, an impact absorbing body and
radial tyres. And an antipollution device
to help protect the community at large.
It’s no secret that since 1967 Fiat have
sold over 1,000,000 cars in thei 24 range.
Fiat 124 Sport Coupe 16G0 . £1746.87
Powered by 1 oOScc twin ohc engine.
llObhp. 112mph. 5 -speed gearbox.
Luxury interior. Lavish instrumentation.
Heated rear window. Four iodine quartz
headlights.
Fiat 124 Sport Coupe 1400. £1645. 62
Powered by 143 See twin ohc engine.
90bhp. 106mph. 5-speed gearbox.
L uxury interior. Lavish instrumentation. •
Heated rear windo w.
Four iodine quartz headlights.
Fiat 124 Estate. £1090.62
Powered by 1 1 97 cc engine.
60bhp. 87mph.
Fiat 124 Saloon. £390. 62
Powered by 1 1 97 cc engine.
60bhp. 87mph.
Heated rear window optional.
Fiat 124 Special. £1100.62
Powered by 1438cc engine.
70bhp. Ovar93mph. Fully carpeted.
Full length rubber cushioning on
bumpers. Heated rear window.
. . . and the exciting new twin cam
Fiat 124 Special T. £ 1176.87
Powered by -1 438cc twin ohc engine.
SObhp. Over 1 OOmph. Fully carpeted.
Full length rubber cushioning on
bumpers. Heated rear window.
Electronic rev. counter.
Take a test drive. Service and spares
are provided by a nationwide network
of selected dealers.
Ask about our Personal Export Scheme
FIAT (ENGLAND) LIMITED .
GREAT WEST ROAD. BRENTFORD , MIDDLESEX
PHONE: 01 -563 8822
Recommended U.K. retail prices including purchase tax
but excluding delivery charges, number pistes
and seat belts.
m
Il
m
m
its
iM
M
m
$
4>
mm
'-H
mm
r .•-.t
'••ysSffl
: rt±.
Si
Mm
M
{/
mn
it-.- V.V
.•VJS-
fiat 124 Saloon
w? ; -
te
T-X".
•>• r -r. •
K
m-%-
Fiat 124 Special
i v
-r*r
A-
.fc)
•■xm
sm
K'/
Fiat 124 Special T
|V. M.w-
• A . ' "
mm*
mm
$K
m
m
V-
v£y.
8ft
-A:
i&Zi
v-wf
■rS?;:
m
m
sc
mx’?
-.a-
-I. J- ■»
The OnUy Telegraph,
Friday. July S3, 1971
Stay at the best
hotel in
PLYMOUTH
The Plymouth Holiday Inn
• 224 large bedrooms —
all with double beds,
private 'bathroom, radio
television and
telephone
0 individual room
temperature control.
• Heated glass enclosed
pool and sauna
for guests.
• Penthouse restaurant
overlooking Plymouth
Sound, coffee shop
and bars.
0 Underground car park.
0 Our “ courtesy ** car
meets London trains.
The Plymouth
Holiday Inn
Armada Way,
Tel: 0752 62S66 Telex: 45279
London Reservations Office
01-S39 7436
Running av/ay
to sea?
Ever thought of trying it ?
Ralph Ashton did it at the
start of a life of high adventure.
In today’s Motor Boat
and Yachting he recalls that
early beginning, in one of the
most vivid accounts ever
published. There are reports
too on a motor sailer, on the
Leeds & Liverpool Canal and
on the news from Cowes. And
diet even further.
to vary the
ace powerboater Sonny Levi
discusses the design of
Surfury. It's all in
Motor Boat
an d Yachting
OUT TODAY 20p
MAP of Hie MIDDLE EAST
India and Pakistan
30" x 40" — fully coloured
Price 25p from aewMgcpts and book.
scUrr*. or 28 p post paid icnrqnr or
p.O l From IBe__ Don?
from X&e OoBj Telwraph
IDnrt- M.E-I. 135. seme.
London. E.C 4, or VVItby Crore.
Manchester-
UNEMPLOYED
HIGHEST FOR
SINCE 1940
TOTAL
By JOHN RICHARDS, Industrial Staff
■m/rORE people were unemployed this month
lfl +Vtan in anv Tnlv fiinnp. 1940. A total of
than in any July since 1940. A total of
785,847 or 3-4 per cent, of the work-force
were registered as jobless on July 12. This
is 61,452 more than the previous month
when the rate was 3-2 per cent.
The figures, issued by the Department of Employ-
ment yesterday, out-stripped the gloomiest predictions
and compared with the eud-of-winter peak of April
5 when 774,000 were out
of work.
A further rise is inevitable
next month, too, because an
estimated 450,000 school-
leavers will be seeking jobs.
It will be too early for Mr
Barber’s mini-budget to take
effect, but the Government
hopes reflationary moves will
start to show themselves within
a few months. Optimistic White-
hall forecasts suggest a gradual
flattening out and reversal of
the upward trend should be-
come apparent as this happens.
The current register is com-
prised of 728,119 wholly-unera-
ployed excluding school-leavers,
a figure in Sated by 24.420 adult
students registering for vaca-
tion work and likelv, if they are
not placed, to remain on em-
ployment exchange books until
September.
Seasonal adjustment
1,450 MADE
REDUNDANT
BY I Cl
Daily Telegraph Reporter
the eve of their annual
holiday 740 workers at
the I C I Fibres factory,
Doncaster, were told yester-
day, that they are to lose
their jobs.
They are among the 1,450 I C I
Fibres employees, eight per cent.
of the work force, who are being
declared redundant.
Doncaster is the worst hit fac-
tory with 600 from the shop floor
and 140 white collar workers
affected. Next is Pontypool with
250 from the shop floor and 28S
office workers. The other 175 are
office workers at Knightsbridge,
Harrogate and Gloucester.
An XC1 spokesman said yes-
terday: “Throughout the world
there is a glut of nylon yarn at
the moment, and the redundan-
cies and certain rationalisation
of production are necessary to
make I C I Fibres nylon interests
a viable interest in the 1970s.”
200 REDUNDANT
BSC axes jobs
FTUHOE British Steel Corporation.
yesterday announced 200
redundancies at its pipe mills at
Hartlepools, Teesside and the
ending of 240 jobs at Stanton,
Derbyshire, with the closure of
a blast furnace.
A spokesman for the tubes
division said there was “little
prospect ” of alternative employ-
ment for the Teesside men. The
redundancies — in addition to the
corporation's recent streamline
plans — were because of a “down-
turn” in business.
Sale threat to 130
ABOUT 130 men, most of them
in the Derby area, will lose
their jobs because Rolls-Royce
is to sell its subsidiary, Product
Support. Rolls-Royce said the
sale was in line with Govern-
ment policy to sell off the
fringes of nationalised indus-
tries, which were viable on their
own. The subsidiary employs
600.
Seasonally-adjusted, the total
oF w holly-unemployed is 788.000,
or 3-4 per cent., about 47.000
more tban in June, when the
percentage was 3-2. In July,
1970, it was 2-6 per cent.
There are already 15,001 im-
emoloved school-leavers — a rise
of 10,089 over the previous
month. School terms end earlier
in some areas, particularly Scot-
land. while children in other
areas have decided to leave early
in the hope of getting ahead of
the rush for jobs.
The number of temporarily-
stopped workers was 42,727
which was 5,551 more tban on
June 14 and about 24,000 more
than July last year.
Lav-offs caused by a strike at
Longbridga, Birmingham, and
short-time working in machine-
tools and cotton textiles in Old-
ham and Bolton helped to boost
this figure but other strikes at
car works in Cowley, Oxford,
and North-Bast ship-repair yards
had ended and were no longer
included.
Sadden increase
The sudden jump ha unem-
ployed between June and July
was the worst for this mid-
summer period since records
have been kept.
In the four week period, the
number of wbolly-workless, .ex-
Railways’ signal
problem
ten
‘not
reduced overnight
ft
By MICHAEL ROTHERA
R AILWAY signalmen will work too long and
too often for safety’s sake for some years
yet as overtime, blamed for at least three derail-
ments in the last two years, c annot be reduced
overnight.
, > ’ :
The situation was explained
by a British Railways Board
spokesman yesterday.
He said multi-million pound
improvements will eventually
rule out human errors but
they were restricted by lack
of financial and human re-
sources.
Mr Clive Jenkins, general secretary of the
Association of Scientific Technical and Managerial
Staffs, discussing a leaflet with a girl outside Caxton
Hail, Westminster, yesterday at the end of a march
in demand for higher pay by National Health Service
medical laboratory technicians.
Industrial News
800 men cost London
docks £T3m yearly
By JOHN RICHARDS, Industrial Staff
PAY demand of 30 per cent, by 10,500 London
dockers was rejected yesterday by employers
who complained that over 800 workers in the labour
force were costing them some £1,300,000 a year
without contributing fully
duding school-leavers, rose by
45.812 continuing in an upwa
trend in the seasonally-adjusted
figures.
These have been rising on an
average of about 28,000 a month,
between April and July and by
about 29,100 a month in the six
months since January.
This is a much steeper under-
lying rise than at this time
last year. The comparative
figures for April-July 1970 and
Jamiary-July 1970 were 8,900
a month and 5,900 a month res-
pectively. The normal seasonal
change to be expected on this
year’s figures would have been
a drop of 1,600; instead, the
seasonally-adjusted rise was
47,400.
In Northern Ireland, which is
counted separately, there were
43,334 workless or 8-4 per cent
of the labour-force. This in-
cludes 39,341 wholly-unem ploy-
ed, 3,450 school-leavers, and 543
temporarily-stopped workers;
seasonally-adjusted, the number
of wholty-un employed was
40,500 representing a rate of 7-8
per cent
Regional unemployment figures
and changes, showing rises of
between 0-1 per cent, and 0-6
to productivity.
The men are employed
sweeping up, opening and
closing shed doors, repairing
damaged cases and picking
up waste from the quayside.
Some spend their time play-
ing cards, others clock on for
their wages and then leave to
do part-time jobs as newspaper
sellers outside the docks.
Mr Joe Payne, acting chair-
man of the London Ocean
Trades' Employers’ Association,
told leaders of the Transport and
General Workers’ Union and
the National Amalgamated
Stevedores' and Dockers’ Union :
“We want to divest ourselves
of most of these characters.”
The unions were told that
their 15-point claim, including a
“ substantial ” rise in basic rates
of £36-50 to £39 for a 31Vhoux
week, would result in a further
upsurge in direct costs’ of cargo
handling and post operations.
In 12 months since May, 1970;
the employers claimed, the wage
bOl had risen by 18 per cent,
from £16,881,282 to £19,945,976
a year. This necessitated some
£3,000,000 being recovered from
port users.
In the same period, the
volume of traffic through the port
had dropped 6 per cent, includ-
ing a 26 per cent, drop in im-
ports and 23 per cent, fall in
exports of conventional cargoes.
Productivity had dropped 5 per
cent, overall, including 27-8 per
cent on loading and 38-79 per
on discharging
cent on disc
tional cargoes.
conven-
er cent in all areas, are as
follows:
Begion
Total on
July 12
Change since % jobless
June 14 in July
1971
% jobless
in June
1971
South East
145,682
+ 4,233
1-9
1-8
East Anelia
18,847
+ 604
2-9
2-8
South Western
41,934
+ 2,733
3-1
2-9
West Midlands
87,655
+ 13,690
5-8
3-2
East Midlands
42.831
+ 1.617
3-0
2-9
Yorks & Humber ...
79,670
+ 5,354
3-9
3-7
North Western
116,777
+ 12,419
4-0
3-6
Northern
73,897
+ 4.242
5-6
5-3
Wales
44.062
+ 3,641
4-6
4-2
Scotland
134,512
+ 12,919 6-2 5-6
-r The total of unfilled vacancies
HEALTH COUNCIL
CHIEF TO QUIT
Dr Bill Jones, 44, first
director-general of the Health
Education Council, is to leave
because he wants a change.
Appointed director-general 2 h
years ago, he has always
believed in outspoken publicity
for the council’s campaigns.
A sex education poster show-
ing a “ pregnant” man roused
widespread comment and some
criticism.
on July 7 was 195.223. which was
fewi
4.554 fewer than on June 9 and
included 151.913 jobs for adults
(down by 12,731 on June but
1,546 more than March) and
61.510 jobs for young people,
8,177 more than on June 9.
The seasonally-adjusted fij
igure
for vacancies decreased by about
10,800 in July and has been droo-
ping on average by about 2,300
a month between April and July
and by about 5.900 in the Jan-
u ary -July period.
In July 1940 there were
827,266 unemployed, comprising
five per cent, of the work force.
Editorial comment — P14
Union help sought
The unions were told that to
keep an unbalanced labour force
with 800 unfit men — about 8 per
cent, of the total — was “ too in-
tolerable a burden to be sus-
tained."
They were urged to consider
joint moves aimed at arranging
for most of these ineffective
workers to leave the industry
and also invited to submit any
other cost-cutting proposals.
Mr Payne said afterwards:
“I think the unions were
astonished at this kind of reply
to their claim, There was some
roaring and shouting and I was
getting ready to duck at any
moment. But it was not
necessary.
“In fact, I feel the unions
have in mind the problems of
port and 1 hope they will face
up to them in an adult fashion.
T don't think we will get back
to the old style of negotiating
where they say ‘you pay us or
we are out on strike
Present average earnings are
£41-10 For a 34 -5-hour week,
but the average age of the Lon-
don dockers is between 47 and
48 despite a recent addition of
703 “ nw bloods " on the
register. The total port labour
force has fallen from about
23.000 in 1967 to just over
16,000.
Many dockers have opted for
early retirement under a volun-
tary severance scheme provid-
ing up to £1,800 “ lump sum ”
for men with 40 years’ service
and a frozen pension. But this
no longer appears attractive
enough to get rid of the dead
wood.
OPERATIONS
DELAYED BY
STRIKE
Daily Telegraph Reporter
]^[INOR operations
in
many hospitals were
postponed yesterday when,
laboratory technicians
staged a one-day strike.
Some operations today will
also be affected.
The 9trike by 1.500 techni-
cians, members of ttie Associa-
tion of Scientific Technical and
Managerial Staffs, was over
three other unions in th-e hos-
pital service using their voting
power on the Whitley Council to
accept “ Inadequate," pay pro-
posals.
ANGER AT
ADVICE
ON PRICES
Daily Telegraph Reporter
^TREASURY advice that
housewives should
“ shop around ” because
there were signs that some
shops and manufacturers
would not pass on the full
purchase tax cuts, was
described as “ irrespon-
sible " and “ pompous ”
yesterday.
The Treasury, as reported in
The Daily Telegraph yesterday,
said prices were not coming
down as much as expected. It
was "rather like what hap-
pened over Selective Employ-
ment Tax.”
Criticism of the Treasury
warning came from both sides
of the counter.
Mr John Pegnall. general
secretary of the National Cham-
ber of Trade, said yesterday:
"I consider the Treasury state-
ment to be quite irresponsible.
" As traders have paid pur-
chase tax on stocks already on
the shelves at the time of the
reduction, they are justified in
passing that tax on.
** But the circumstances of
competition, as well as a genuine
desire to bolster trade, means
that the cuts will take effect at
once.”
“ Even if we had all the
money in the world we could
□ot get rid of small signalboxes
overnight, not even within two
years," said the spokesman.
The time in which manufac-
turers can supply equipment
For planned schemes is also
likely to further hold up plan-
ned improvements.
1,830 men short
British Railways are 1,830
signalmen short oF their estab-
lishment of 13,000 signalmen
and because of this many have
to work overtime just to main-
tain scheduled services. The
position is aggravated at holi-
day times and when personnel
report sick.
The serious position affecting
passenger safety was high-
lighted this week when an in-
spector with the Department of
the Environment called for a
survey of the average hours
signalmen work and the fre-
quency oF their rest days at a
public inquiry into the derail-
ment of a London to Brighton
passenger train near Havwards
Heath. Sussex, oo June 28.
The shortage of signalmen is
spread over all regions. London
Midland is 570 below establish-
ment: Eastern Region 540;
Southern 400; Scottish 200; and
Western Region 120.
In the past 14 days one in-
quiry and one report have
stressed possible human error in
signalling operations. Aware of
this, British Railways say: “We
are very strict in making sure
that staff rules are adhered to
because signalling is a matter
of life and death.”
TESTS SHOW
AIR DEFENCE
DEFECT
The system which covers an
area from north of Norway to
south-east Turkey cannot give
warning of low flying Russian
attacks. Neither can it give
warning of a Russian attack
from North African bases or
from aboard the Russian fleet
in the Mediterranean.
It is also very vulnerable to
jamming, because it relies on
voice communications. The sys-
tem is called Nadge (Nato Air
Defence Ground Environment!.
All 14 Nato nations con-
tributed towards its £120 million
costs, with Britain contributing
11 per cent. An international
consortium based in Britain was
formed in 1967 with the interna-
tional electronic companies re-
sponsible for the design and
building of the svstem. signing
fixed price contracts.
Rising costs have caused the
“ pruning " of the system with
consequent loss of fa Fictional
ability. The original fixed-price
contracts have been followed
through.
Marconi’s losses
Recruiting problems
Mr CHve .Jenkins, geaeral
secretary, said: “More than
1.200 technicians of a total of
9.000 employed in hospital
laboratories in England and
Wales are out. Services are
bound to be seriously affected.’’
He said at a meeting in Lon-
don that future action was likely
to include strikes for “indefinite
periods."
He. said there was a case For
refusing to handle all samples
sent to the laboratories from
consultants dealing with private
patients. “It is outrageous that
our members have to take on
this extra burden for no reward
when other people are becoming
rich because of the National
Health Service facilities.”
Quick to respond
Miss Rosemary McKobert. of
the Consumers’ Association,
said: "Our impression is that
the traders have been quick to
respond. This is a most extra-
ordinary statement from the
Treasury, and a bit pompous.”
Mr Thomas Lynch, president
of the Union of Small Shop-
keepers. thought some big con-
cerns were using the cuts as a
sales "gimmick.”
A snokesman at the Treasury
yesterday said: "Our advice
generally would be to shop
around. What my colleague said
was unofficial, and there may
have been a little misunderstand-
ing.”
Recruiting presented certain
S roblems, however. “We are
eliberately not recruiting in any
area where a modernisation
scheme is pending, but we are
doing our utmost to recruit else-
where. In other regions we are
up against the fact that there
is little unemployment or wage
rates do not compare favourably
with those commanded bv semi-
skilled workers who have a
guaranteed 40-hour week with
Saturday and Sunday off.
“ Although basic rates for
signalmen are £23-95 a week,
giving average earnings of about
£31 a week, this involves shift,
weekend and night work. For a
little less a semi-skilled man in
other transport industries can
earn almost as much with Satur-
day and Sunday completely
free.”
M62 OPENING DATE
The 13 mile Trans-Pennine
section oF the M62 between
Lancashire and Yorkshire will
be opened to traffic on Aug. 3.
Eventually it is envisaged that
almost all the one-man signal-
boxes will be reDlaced by power-
operated ones. Soon in the Wes-
tern Regioa, following the £4
million modernisation scheme
now almost completed, 15 signal-
boxes will control 2,500 route
miles now controlled by between
350 to 400 oid-type boxes.
Marconi, the British firm with
much of its own money in-
volved in the project, will make
a loss of about three per cent
on the deal over the six years
from 1967. when it was begun.
Nadgeco Ltd., the inter-
national consortium responsible
for the system, is to ask gov-
ernments to make up the Mar-
coni and other company losses,
and, if possible, ensure a reason-
able profit.
LIBEL DAMAGES
FOR YOUTH
WORKER
Mr Eric St John Foti, a soaal
worker, is to get substantial libel
damages over an allegation, that
an inquiry was to be held into
drugs and sex at his Bognor
Regis j/uuth dub.
Mr Edward Adeane, for Mr
Foti, told Mr Justice Geoffrey
Lane in the High Court yester-
day that there was not a word
of truth in the allegation. He
was announcing terms for dis-
posing of a libel action brought
by Mr Foti, of Arundel Priory,
Sussex, against Beaverbrook
Newspapers, publishers of the
Sunday Express.
Mr Foti has run the Shoreline
dub youth hostel and club since
1965. Mr John Previte, for the
newspaper, said they regretted
the publication of the allegation
which they conceded was all the
more serious because of Mr
Foti’s work for young people.
Trinity Term Calls to the Bar
Trinity Term calls to the Bar
last night were as follows:
LINCOLN'S INN
_ N. Vattbiaathan- C. P. Cheim Chorm
Ton- Rnlrfslmram BIO G. W. pijnlouiis-
Ingham, V. R. Inel. Mbs E. H. Williams.
R- C. Nnmn. R. J. KHddn. M.' O.
, n’M Hun-Honi. T.
PIrrtr. S. I. Khan.
Lff Gaan Scoot. M. G. Nabi. X. Abinud.
Scnh Pong Tshal, F. Bosrln. S. R.
Slabs. Miw 6. E. Frew.
K. BrfloNotirantam. B. Ban-rill. E. £.
T*id-«-Fatt. W. L. Warm. D. H. Sot!
ram. S. K. S<-a. I. Kbedadowala, □. H.
Smith. P. W. Altkrn. N. P. McN. Cnrl-r.
Ramil atn Noah TOlth. P. S. Gill. Sh-'kb
A. F. M. 5. Bari.
M&Lranon.
V. Isaac.
G.
R. Knrup. P. f._ Murphy. _N. T. A.
otan. M. C. Alz.il, S. G. HuQtin. M. A.
-cknrd. Ml— C. L-rry L. Go or lab.
J. B. Mukumf>jia-Mu»oKo. Irtlnr Bln
Slidfi). Miami Wo, Mail MoheoH-d
□ . A. S. OloniDfeml. Vtabd Nuor BIO
H«JI Yahya. A. Maihnnrui'ngli. Mad
Wcno-Kw.il. F. Lnoi Han HID. E.
Midok. MIm R. S- WaluMmbl.
B. EC. ChittnrlK, M. Adilrrln. Mbs V.
Chung Sin Mol. T. A. Khan. A. S.
Snare-, Too Koy Hntk. W. Llow Wnh
frmq. Mbu V. II, Raldcv. Wan Mnd/ihl
Won Mahrttnr. R. A. Ram-on. A. Oncn.
Cbonn Ttalan Fook. G. ParaJaRlnnam.
R. R. B. Dahndncnln'ih, L. R, UnMrr-
umn. M. A. Trank. Miss N. M. Kamil.
Ghazl Bln kMk. Tenq Limn -Chi.
N. A. Slrnurl. A. J. C. Buimtion.
F. R. B .Holloway, A. A, E.Ika-lfani>(.
VUn, Tab Wrl MH. H. M. Joy. W. R.
Sandora . ,T. K. Banlli. Ml— L. I. I'araiil.
F. K. Palll. R, Chun G.-uk
Sinn* ram S;0 MuitiutMlanHuroj. C. L. A.
WllMn. M. R. Lowery- R. C. Ga.kN].
D. S. Kb era. A. Mirtnonnlnr. I. J.
MC: A._0._ BramwelJ. D. J.
Slcotirnv Min* L. G. K. Edutcl. p.
Snap. A. W. H- Oniric*. D. G. Trtvrtt.
5. T. Arlnilr. D. G. Goldberg, G. P,
Outer. J. D. Cnoka.
INNER TEMPLE
M. C. D. 5 coll -So wrar, A. J, Ml»-r.
‘ - ». K MUni.
K. T. Bwu I 5. K'llirilaki-,
M. _C. Araks. J. Llmvi-Mla, J, Kalawalc.
■i. R._ R. Roy._ S. ‘
J. S. Lamey. R. R. Roy. S'. 9. " Vnllu-
plilal. A- C. Oeddcs, 5. 3. Emrii.
R. A. HazHqno. A. B. Cokor. J. a.
stTiinn.
J. M. Chua. G. A. Uniub. R. K.
A'iycnirtn-Pri-invpfi. D. N. MacCormlck.
T-ii Choog Lee. C. F>-rnandac. A. T.
Lewis. V bbnniTHigiun. A. O. Marriott.
M. K. BaUrr. h. HarcbuniD. C. J.
Lnckharl-MiMnmrry. C. S. Allan. J. M
Munro. I. D. A. P. Slmumn:
G. 5. Goodwin -CJII.
.. G _ D ’ H. Hlslnp. K. P, Ji-nkliw.
M. £. CaniptK-ll-Tlech, Hfeh.imuridlnbtn
HW 1 ^iihoip. G. M. Robert*. Tan Chok-
vtn^' M i‘ A r- W- Straw S. E.
J 1 ™- J- C. Uuman, R. c_. Seward.
R. J. Penrec Whnilji-y. N. J. C. Si-wari.
H. U. Onwujckwc. g. Ntco. A. U.
I wort.
M. _Lonan.„ IJ.Jty. _D. Collins.
S D “;- J - „ C i ^dl,-. D. R. Halbert.
D. C.. Losrll-Pank. b. P. a„rke. Hun.
M. Coleman. Ho J.imi-s Yam Kuan. R. S.
MrNi. A. P. S. Dp Freitas. M. B.
Mohiimml. J. C Grbnlys. N. J. Hall.
JV, E- Sawyer. V. B. A. Temple. H. J.
Michael Is. G. J. Buchanan. K. M.
Jenkins, T. E. P. Stevenson- K. T.
Kckurn. A. D. Wurd. A. J. Hirst.
R. M. WhUftiker. I». j! £ "».
Unnvrie. M. C. L. Carpenter. H. Martin.
£■ H. Wiltshire. J. g. Ros*. R. S.
Smith, m. p. Darrell. J. A. Loiter.
«. D. Cronin. B. A. O-Sulllv.in. N. p.
Diner. J. A. C.lrtliu. A. F. Grant.
MIDDLE TEMPLE
r.»,i.»a A ■ o N “r 18, c Kl s V • . KnWramdlni.
■Wuhan. R T. F. lMrra.l-C,.irke. J K.
ARIMh. A. K. Cl 1 . p<tl lab. M. U. O.
tilliMkliiin. JayHsin-ihiiin S.’O M.makain.
h. w. RM K. Moore. D. A. Chappie,
c* *'-o H - . ( - ,,| o- Llliinng > Ik Sim. Mrs
S. A.. Eton., by. Mix* V. A. t. di- Grand'*.
5?- . - C - A - Tijwfl—nd. S.
Vofoii. D S Hairorniiiulnnh. j. R. h.
Coussey, Ml-., A. K. Vowllladou.
n o.' F ‘ L- Cr, ' nn un. n.
'r- N - ^'iPraon. Riiihrapatjiy
MUUU Coi itflU; aAw.iin y , V. «- Winslow.
M r J J- E Cjnss. j. A. Atari*, E. J.
Hahi.ii/i. M M. rerknfl. Tun r.hm So n ^ t
H. N. Abdul Mxti-k hin
Mob iimn oil. P. A. Puku. M. y. Halnrs.
Ann ,U Stibrl bln Hull Almiod Inlui'dln.
J. A. Hilllhtny. R. .1. Lewi-.. A M. B.
Johnson. Miss G s. RhIiI<Ki«i. G. F.
Pu mnn. O Hr.ibhakar.in.
„ T r,A. Cll 2^ r ; . r • R - Raja*’- Abdul
R-v>hld bln Abilul Mnnntl. M. n. Mark*.
¥ V- A- fldrtnn p M v .MUlihiion
T. M A.<hC IX. B. Mcltin**s J. M. le
Pella*, r. G. Bei-nard R.i—i.nl. p. E.
Innln. S. J. G. I Inyd. P. N. M. GIbm.
R. Jflcnte. U. j. Phelvln. J. S. A.
Radnrrlll. Abdul Kndlr bln Sulahnun,
p. A. M. Durant, Miss R. 3. 8.
Burrows, fa. J. Ihumosoti - B. M. Hooper.
M. Huhsnin, L. C. Goldstone. C. M.
Treocy. Mbs S. M. L. Bell. J. J.
Cavell. P. R. Brunner. J- K.. Venn.
A. R. Jnnmohan. B. F. J. LanqstaS.
S. L. Cirx. G. Lodge, W. A. D. Akuto-
Addo Tan Bn KJan. C. G. MuMerraan,
D. M. T. Edlln. J. M. Ua worth. S- D.
Lrxrit V, Ot-d - kK nd n e . R. a. Dawson, S. M.
Miller. A. R. G. Scott -Gall. J. D,
Webber. D. G. Powleu.
A P. Duckwratli. R. C. J. Cock
B. Nobin. R. a. G. lnnlK, F j.
Colnrd. J. V Flhrgeraid, Mlse L. Kore.
U h r ,l!f ord d ^ fawclkc^ Mhn
N" A - cianej 1 p " C " 6cotl - J- Com™.
GRAYS INN
C, » KI J? > - .J 4 : F. McKcaouc. v.
aotese. F. M. M ultra. D. H. Wander.
R. D. Bumvarrr. D. A. Howarlb. E. f.
Cousin*. M. O. Kiiicr. M. B. Kins.
A A. Lnni . L. n,i Grucnldhe. R, k,
Thlan. D H Flolehor. A. E. Dworxak.
JJ- R- Kina. P. C. Horrlcharan. S.
wiicux. L J. Ruse. T. G. Vondan,
H. X. B. Heilbrun. P. M. Rogers,
J- M uchell. V. f . Di-Wborst. K.M.
Vi-nnr. favturunjll Singh Ludhor. C. LI, H.
Wnli-hever. P. A. Moore. M. D. Byrne,
L. Send i. J. Tcrylor, J. L. Evens. R. D,
Montagu. Si. R. Sullivan, S. R. Ctasper,
R. B. Latham.
D. P. Jones. P. R. M. Pauldcn.
I. J. Dahkln, P. McDonald. L. A. E.
Marcu—Jonrs, B. DnnneUy. W. J, a
E S ,rha J 1 - ?. ,ew FlBn PkOT."
M. U. bcolt. K. B. Lonitan, I. n
BarnoR. E. J. Hlndley. P. F. A Knot,
li .inn 1 eno Wong. j. j. Wurdlnw. Foonn
Moc Lev S I. Black. S. W. Hemming*
S' 'r* - *. rt Ml s l * r,, ' 1 *i' E „^" 3 n-Bond.
5. C. Efwej. D. N. .Pratt, p. r.
Hierhov. J. Reeder R. Harding. R, j!
C-yonwy. A. D. Mllron. I. H. Dennis,
ij* M. H. Pales. I. D. Uendn
D It Ea*»l-t.»onc. J. E . Samuel. F *
Tli*.ni«->. n. V. Cooper. S. Warn'ocLl
Smith.
h™ ■ *SSl th - n Ko ?!' Kwong. Soak
DoSLuf G ' C. W.
The Benchers of Grav’s Inn
qpnfor* a c W 2 r ? ed u* the following
senior Scholarships and Exhibi-
tions:
fBJt^ w c.. Se t5^M. lp: M - J - Ba *°°
Macastde Scholarship; p. yooiKr,
G - B -
K^^'^/o^OKnbrid^.. T.
T “S?Sr. »Quc«is- C.. C-ambrtdOTl.
- WHItanj Shaw 5cholandifa> and Arden
bridge l NoTnwo ririnlw Had, Cam-
Allyinn Rlchardnon Scholnruhjp ; J. R.
iKoblo C.. Oxlordl.
Malcolm HJlbcry ScholarsWp r D. R.
Davtat CTrtntVy HaH. Cnrotyridwrt.
Stem Scholarship : M*w M. A. Stm-
mons l Queen Mary C*. London Uq).
. Ardrn Prtre; A. A. Goytner (Pem-
C. . OKfortl-
.Special Grants: R. J. Airord (Sheffield
V 1 - <■ J- Dobklo IQtwn-k c. Ohfordl,
J. M. H. ForitrCr (Sidney Swtei C.
S’ S- Ham Ufa a (Blrra-
u). T- G. Hartley iBrf&ioi ux
[5 ni t C. London), j. d. Jijikin*
(Xlng-a C. tantoni. T. r. Kiu< , eT i
HbH. ConAriuiof Al
McDonald tUvirpool in. * ,
rnimilMliMi TT m ’
B. C. Bril. P. P. Somerwl. J. W. A • D r (London
leekei*. s. M. Rebrio. B. C. R. Kfene' ■ p- Pratt |[ ncdlo C,
■ l - M. CTiuVwTh-m"*; j s' F p R i‘u Uc ,CaJ «K C. Cam-
S* us i.! ,, - M ;,i n „ f , i- vi i-^haii. m t. ' r .;
Shnrtlew -rtli. H. k. IMrcl. V. F . JV
r hird ,h i ! ’' f' ?' 5 V” b, r U, ^** , “ , * !n - '■
C. BlrtL O. E. L.rnurln, E. V Ri.]r n b.
....
♦ j:
By Air Cdre EL M. Donaldson
Air Correspondent
CERIOUS shortcomings in
° Nato’s £120 million air
defence system, now being
built, have been revealed
by a nine-month series of
tests.
TRIPOLI
two flights a week each way by
THE SCOTTISH INTERNATIONAL AIRLINE
The best: service going flies onluesdays at 13.20 and onThursdays at 10.20 in 3hrs..5mins.fram Gatwick-Londorfs most conven 1
Scheduled jet: slices to
■;;r
. t’>‘
irad
. ; J-
. i rv : ■
,-.*r
hr
nS
-KPI
ad
-ir
*. .-I
■'7*r
- <
■nm r • .
rm.-< -
n---
..‘nr: :
'• nv.-
v-
ir.-
‘i 'J- *.-■ *,
; .V r>-r
-Of :jv:i
»' f J;
Peril's
orip
T\fl
CA
til}.
Jenkins says Six terms * not ideal hut ac
, 'EFFECT ON BRITISH
■ 1
The Daily Telegraph . Friday, July S3, 1 972
House of Lords
.„JH!i£CONOMY expected
ro BE STIMULATING
BY OUR PARLIAMENTARY STAFF
tJR JENKINS, Shadow Chancellor and
I- w * deputy Labour leader, said in the Com-
1 -• 1 S cions last night that the terms for entry to the
|> ipommon Market obtained by the Conservative
' lJh, r0vernment appeared to him “not ideal but
r i cceptable.”
S J f Dt ry heId out tbe prospect of growth led by
* : i vestment and exports, something which had eluded
.• Jritain for so long. The stimulating effect on the
. • conomy could be “ very . -
tr iking.” view that we must necessarily
sterling and the doUar. “I am cap to this country that we and decisions of the labour r r*
rather inclined .to the interna- should have to run our fnreitfn r.-ihin»t- whirl, i«ri iokt Commons Questions
rh™kw"X n .A U «. 1 „^ , - , „ n j!' P0,icy 'V" did bcrause ": e a P Patton for British memlfer-
imnK we s non id nave some indi- were working on an economic ship. 4^ IT 1
the Gov< “ Calia - ha n
-Shadow of sovereignty - ESTfe — pSSST tTZl Z jobless
Some people feared that entry As to the position oF the Com- acceptable." |OJLM.CSo
wouid mean giving up irrevoc- monwealth. Sir Alec recalled He had no doubt that En«T.«h J
ably a large measure of control that in the late 1950s. when he would become the SrinS P* 1
over our own affairs. “I do not was in the House of Lords, he )an«ua*e in Eutoop T1 OT1TI*** £*1516
see it this way at alL" made a speech as Common- wished* wSre a La^uJ^ove™! IlgUTe CiaS
°ts of the modern wealth Secretary concerning the meat that would be negotiatin'* . _
world had removed a large part erosion of preferences by Com- Britain’s entry he rejoiced t? By 0nr Parliamentary S
of that control, and if wc de- monwcalth countries at that think it would be such a Govern- * attarlr ««
luded ourselves by thinking that t'™ f • because they wished to moot that would be condScST* A N
we could cling to the shadow of hasten their own processes of British affairs in the EEC Ion" « m . e ? t fay , CallagI
sovereignty, we would as a re- manufacture. before rhe end of the transT- Opposition spokesman
suit have less and not more in-
fluence over what really now, regret that action. I think Mr ST JOHN-STEVas; rn
ha PP en .^ [I ^ an asset for all of us that Chelmsford) said he had worked
He illustrated this by dcs- tneSe t-ommonwealth countries for the European movement for cnange witn Mr Heath in »«u«iw «nuum» >i>gc, w in Bedford askine how he could
cnbmg what had happened are equipping themselves with 25 years. He supported British the Commons vesterdav. le ?J e .^ e « p ° we £ oF , dep0rta 1 t,o . n F Sin ®
when he was attending the two 5!L e “"°?,l c iH* 6 * f 5 oni V hich entry because it was onlv within Mr CALLAGHAN: Is it not with the Home Secretary only J " T Dassed it on t0 my coJ .
special prices meetings in Stock- t bc y .can climb to independence a wider European context that time that the Prime Minister b u . cons,d *r red ,l necessary in ] ea g ues i n *jh e mid-Bedfordshire
holm and Bonn, of Hie Group of » * ME ^ itish economic and political spent a little le< s time onthe J B V"E r lf ]Q«f SS’ Smonci? uSder whiS
Tern when Chancellor of the fioriT b v t£ Britfih interests could be safeguarded. Common Market and a b’ttle J*® 61, Govern_ Woburn Abbey comes," be said.
I did not then, and I do aot tional period.
Mr ST JOHN-STEVAS fC-.
Callaghan in ASYLUM
jobless ‘FREEDC
figure clash SBKffiS- Bin
By Onr Parliamentary Staff mal Tf
AN attack on the Govern- to deportation if the Home
ment by Mr Callaghan, Secretary' thought it condu-
Opposition spokesman on cive to the public good,
home affairs, over the “ dis- Lord WADE (Lib.) said in
astrous " unemployment the Lords yesterday,
figures led to a sharp ex- But hi ® amendment, rr
change with Mr Heath in f be resumed commit ee- i
Lord Rudolf
of Woburn
joins Labour
r itCiaiiuiw The Duke of Bedford’s second
son. Lord Rudolph Russell, has
fv,,, joined his local Labour party.
Parliamentary Staff p ul |, e was not available for
comment on his reasons last
night.
Lord Rudolph, 27, who ran
away from Prince Charles’s old
school, Gordonstoun, and then
entered the Aim industry as a
tea-boy, sent a postcard show-
ing a picture of his father's
But his a mendmen t, "moved on *?}& ho T e ,L Wob T u5 ? Abbey '
the resumed commitee- stage, to K r I £ r r?jf s Ji5S:- L 2i?“lS
Sir Alec Douglas-Home,
;oreign and Common wealth
nECM5arilY ^ yssn
&TSU ffi ^ STAWaSB Honrutty study
The immediate eflect on thr* been crucial to the whole stan- 5 ^ c _l ase J_ . L vv . e _ * —
ment down? ' ' Dm Vpr which for Bedfordshire Labour chairman,
Mr .KEAXH: spent to C^monwMl “dSfzeS f«.*M tor ,
more time in understanding the t _ p j Wa rf e there wa scaT in rani ament at me last
Common Market you would not <r re?t strenSfh of f eeHne about Gen eral Election, said: "It is
be in your present position. frweSm of DolltteldasSum not nnu sual for a member of the
TTie Prime Minister, replying L n d °f 0 f“ refiHeS* an“ hereditary aristocracy to join
gbout unem- Xr en??Sts who £iSt K Labour.”
seat in Parliament at the last
plied 29 per cent, of their im-
Secre- ine rnme minister, replying
- t jj e to Labour protests about unem
Jritain’s entry. Some of the “ ents c °st the next couple sl er s representing the Six Cora- t heir dxoice
iewer Commonwealth coun- of years beFore we can hope to ra °n Market countries retired to
ries were already findinc it Sf 1 ,* 1 ? f Vnarai ?, benefits are see if they could report a joint Divei
n their own interests S t0 be smal! indeed, well view to the remaining countries
L FFr “ S t0 fflve within a °y margins of forecast- present. They waot
£*»in C preference over ing error, althoo-h." he added , „ . ins partner:
51 liain ' amid laughter. " these are liable Long adjournments wished ro bu
r a >L: t0 be fairly large.” it had been
Diversified trade
Long adjournments
ing partners from whom they
wished to buy, and on the whole
“closest consideration” to points S , f£ rae ft Il s S id were potilically inconvenient or who
in a full and detailed letter .JP® b| gh- He added that might do or say things a par-
about the Hanratty case sent to were 24.4-0 university ticular Government thought
hrai by Mr Paul Foot. (James students wh o had registered were not conducive to the public
Hanratty was executed after for vacation employment for „ ood _
They wanted to find new trad- being found guilty of the A 6 lw £, Il1 2® 1 T f , XT j .. . „ “If a person has not com-
1 murder.) , CALLAGHAN, describing mitted a crime and is not a
murder.)
“I can no
toy Jenkins
Deeply-held
differences
Resuming the debate, Mr
ENKINS, said it was intended
There was laughier when Mr •* had been a very good thing comment because
make any furlher the Rsure of B20 000 unemployed threat to national security, why
•ause, a" I under- 3S ^- d,s = stro “ s ' asked illS should he be deported? ”
, i unoer estimated reduction of 100.000
American Nazi
Lord BROOKE OF CUMNOR
BISLEY RECORD
BY LEFT-HANDED
TEAM
By Our Shooting Correspondent
Record-breaking continued at
(C.l. a Former Home Secretary, J. n Danelagh, Royal
recalled the case oF Lincoln Naval Air Command raised the
Rockwell, an American Nazi who
slipped into Britain in I9G2. .
record by five points.
In the Rifle Clubs. Oxford and
. ■ .. . - ir-jTr- The economic object of the
ieri? nF Sc <f b 6 ?2“ Fth . e exercise was addiHonal growth,
fi It? !T“i historic It wou , d be nil1 ii R etl unless the
If Britain does not enter the come 7
'■sue and the reasonableness or ^ u,r united states Secretary of the wcaitn imerrais wun memoei-
therwise of the terms wLS v. ur r sue<i f«hci« Treasury tended to be calmer sb 'P of ^e Community. They
he Government had obtained L ol l Ih ’ thosc w than the British Chancellor, ar ? complementary to each
ir D “ bad seen m the past year. . because Hie V.S. Serretarv other.”
the United Slates Secretary of “My conclusion is that our if Britain does not enter the come 7 ”
the Treasury." EEC tbe jobs of nearly 500.000 Mr HEATH replied that it was
In such circumstances, the eno ®l h - , em Draco Lommon- mcn {n t h L . aero-space industry not the custom to make fnre-
U niled States Secretary of the wealth interests with member- might be at risk, said Mr. FORD casts on the movement oF unem-
Treasury tended to be calmer s b'P oF the Community. They (Lab., Bradford, N.). ploymenL
than the British Chancellor, complementary to each Mr HEATif replied that he
“He was a declared admirer p!! 11 bridge Rifle Association's
of Hitler and his presence, lffi-handed team put up the
EEC tbe J°bs of nearly 500.000 Mr HEATH replied that it was whether or not politically incon- ^rdby five points And in the
enough to embrace Common- m p n ; n t j, L . aero-space industry not the custom to make fore- venieot, was politically detest-
able.
“I was able to get rid oF him
Jersey, have added four points
to the previous best.
The second stage of the St
Government MPs wouliT be udd seen io Hie past year. because Hie US. Secretary.
,isc to “ treat ft as such'' and W ?- ne r erItid c,car live with whatever the Six
oL oreasionallv as an understanding From the Govern- derided, wherras
i s o™ 2v Joints m - ei1t 14,31 Sro ^ ln - be necessarily the
“ There” are ieealv h’-id dif given a new and deosu-c prior- United Kingdom.
i_r: e _« a rr ! _.5® pJy ity. otherwise the economic .. r
understanding from the Govern- derided, whorras this was not
ment ttiat growth was to _ be necessarily the case with the
was not sure the number was
quite as large as that, but it was
nZh,l°ft D w thiS i5 fH e exercise oF entry might be self- H nuatio°a of
■n both side oF the House. We arfoarinu rinuanoo or
*;ould get on much better if we <• muct h av< » an H ' f l' ch . the .?':
“ T do not wish to see a con-
luatioa oF the posirion in
¥ J Mr HEATH replied that he <f ^ t „ mth th e full support of public Ceor-eV Vase compeHUon was
her was not sure the number was “ Stroke ” comment opinion because he happened to sh 0 t With rh e Sest PMsiblf
New super-powers quite as big : as : JaL but .il .was There, was a further skirmish ^ r a " fceS score of 150 achieved by tvo
There was one more consider- Snerialists in rh^ n a^^cn a i nd Rfi!i a few minutes later. Mr LTPTON ? Canadian it would have been competitors. N. T. Heathoote
ion he wished to advance to beb’eved lh!r?^S5T?S*m B .Sh fT ' ah ” «rixton). complaining impossible to d 0 a ns thing. beat P. C. Fleming by one point
e House. The original impetus nnn !ril° 1 about the delay before the This power in relation to to resolve the tie.
“Stroke” comment
There was a further skirmish
original impetus greater -opportunities if
iT ° * Z °° u ° e ■ r ,r - we “ We must also have an
11 respect each other s sincerity. undrr i a king that those less well
Ve will impress the country. 0 fj xv j^ b e protected From bear-
which the Six decide to a vital
extent, matters which are cru-
cial to this country, and all we
ran do is have a little chat with
•urope and the world more if i D2 the burden of Market costs." r ^e Americans Vhis^s symbolic European rivalry,
e talk more about the issue and Americans, i nrs is symbolic
For unity in Europe sprang from worked to 1
an instinctive desire to banish companies.’
war between Europeans. The last
two wars were labelled “world
wars ” but their origins were in COM!
worked tntfVihpp win. Prime Minister’s sneprhes aliens had been a valuable one
2fnl« 8 “ “ European readied fh(? jib rary where Mem- for the Home Secretary to
bers could studv them, asked: possess. It was hard to see why
tion of some. Government help monetary problems."
e talk more about the issue and This was not nierelv a ones- r ^m.ncans. i nrs is svmftoiic
ahnnt parh nthpr I tus was nor merely a nues of a much Wlder ^ e ] d r ^ an
.ss about each other. tIon of SO me Government helD monetary problems."
My position us. I believe, for a very limited number nF „ tn enA t u 0
loderately well known. I have oeople manifestly briow. or right a “c e ,. h _ t0 At i'* .y 1 ' ^ 1 /P a,n "
ndcavoured to make to the on, the poverty line. There hn So the bavi. o? , r.r
louse the general case For entry were many millions more ppople « fllia i nartn'pp^hin 3
n a substantial number of occa- iust above whose .standard of be ^,?l n
COMING DEBATES
HOUSE OF LORDS
bers could study them, asked: possess. It was tiara to see wny
41 In future will you arrange for there should be a distinction in
ropi*»s of vour -speeches to rpach law according to whether a
Loito-Kawge Matth [900 Snrre*
2 S 9 . Mit» 4 l—*'( 286 . VarKstilre 283 ,
Bcrkiihlrr 283 .
Ran Ei,* nit : Rnnl Naval Air Cam-
tnond A 140. 136. 126 ■= 402: RAF
Air Siicamt rommatnl lal. l5o. 134 —
401: mouth R N 599.
much wider field than “Now, in the Community' Mon.. Tries, and Wed: Debate
I auw, auu ncu, LieDdtE I . - , ■ . „ ,
Council, nations ran reconril* on White Paper on United King- " ,s renlv _nv saying: As far as
thp Mbrarv at a stroke? ” man came fom the United
Mr fl^TH lanahmelv ended ?. tat ^ or Ca ? ad , a "I cl?e " bere in
the law according to whether a * 07: p:5m ?“ ,h w N *® 9 - _ . ’ .
man came i r oni tne uniten r \ irtt->ian<ir.< «r«m 409 . Bpnvham r c
the Commonwealth.
He wanted to see the main-
their differences and seek with dom and European Communities. a stroke is concerned, you look - '£ r ” 'offifL ’
a greater degree of ensurance to . T h “ rs: Social Security. Civil as if vou yourself have suffered 7t riSt
try and arrive as beM they can Aviation and Immigration BHIb, that fate recently." Government thought it right to
403. Armv T R Clnh D 408.
TAUiUrjar MillMU 206. Qrtlgs 204,
PnipIliHM 202. AIU20I44: Mi« J. U.
Snaq 102. Ml*s J. A. Nobb* 102.
T.nrd WI^DLESH AM. Minister s " *" ,M - Ml » J.' Nobb », 1M - .
State. Home Office, said the nr^in^o."^ 20 : c.p'i’o'/V. H.‘R&*r5;
11 a suuw cuuiai uuuiuei ui occa- lu*^ aunve wniKst: .mciiko" n m AniPrira anrf hrr Furnnpan ,ii:„ c
ions oyer the past 10 years. My Jiving was in no condition to i an hjtri h d pp h n * i*. fnr
onvictions are as strong as ever, bear am- additional burdens. f oq -
"The terms are not ideal but “Tf the Government allows p ' “ ■
1 me they appear acceptable." burden to Fall unfairly ihev Germany’s role
will be opposed with the greatest
Six trade pattern
■ Looking at the experiences of
■te E E C countries following the
etting up of the Community,
lere was a certain pattern.
possible determination from this
side oF the House."
.Regional policy issues
equal partnership between a harmonious conclusion.
America and her F.urooean allies. “I believe with comp'ete con-
than had beeu possible for the viction that the presence of
past 20 years. Britain in their councils would
_ , . make that ensurance doubly day). in £ nouse uiac mr lepton L'hVrh ” ** HrTm e~ Secretaries " had
Germany’s role sure." TUBS = Consolidated Fund bisr^ found i^nTcessarrto ui This
There were cheers when he The completely new problem ered. We hope it was not the pewr,. mostlv cases oF con-
said he wanted to see Germany facn? Europe was the new class thelSdn^Sl RelSioS* Ml ° n Prime Minister’s intention to be victed criminals.- The right of
ever more firmly anchored into of . suoer-Powers. which had -5^^. In du?M a ^ nfiJLn. personally offensive. Would be anneal would, he believed, pro-
the democratic community, with arrived to stay. The power .°f tbe BID. Hri.’ amdiSL Kelatl0ns please now make amends? " vide adequate safeguard against
HOUSE OF COMMONS . ^ ‘SS
MON.: Debate on White Paper ri^g Sn ? point of ordt ^d:’ ^onwealth and Ir.sh Cl ients,
on United Kingdom and Euro- *‘ti ,, within the knnwIpdo , <*‘hF‘ " In -recent years there bad been
pean Communities (4th and last th “. S Hdu * se that Mr Llpton only about 12 cases a year in
Government thought it right to ?,. N ' r. 0, H^ihcrtir ^s! ra j Ta o.
extend the power of deportation A-mby iso. tic 13 .
suffered a. falL From which" we !' , ' blcb .Home Secretanrs had
are haopy to see he has recov- found it necessary to use this
ered. "We hone it was not the Pr'vrr,. mosilv cases oF
r a reduction of tension between Soviet XTnion was continuing to
Questions or regional policy rasl and west and 0 f arms ; n increase, and Britain must ex-
1CIC WB3 a LCl lOJU paLLCIU. e any TTWI anu UI « I Ulo IU LUC “"m uiupl r *> m of a dpc - Mnlinn F1T1 rorfoc
41 We find, first, a very large con r c ,* ri1 t n Labour MP^'and tn centre oF Europe. pect that the United States with recommendation for welfare
icrease in intra-communitj- dumber® of mb? It w!l “ I want Europe, as a rich and her many preoccupations wou d livestock.
•ade following the dismantling ! wL- in conr^i vaM e H, J relatively fortunate continent, to maintain her nuclear umbrella M ON. AUG. 2: Industrial Re!
f tariff barriers. Partly as a n m^MnTtsWh i 1 p Pp responsive to the needs of but make some redeployment of hons Bill, Lds. amdts.
esult of this great growth of w thr rh f poorer , t V or , ld ’' As Chlna ?rnund force L s m El,rope -
-ade. they had a very sharp in- s n %rpe ipiiinp^naranrranhc “U hpr ful1 P 1acP as rhp third Within the framework of t «i T 1 * *
rease in their levels of invest- " tvmholic oF Conservative in oF the 5l,0fir pnwers - be riid nnt Nat0 - Europe would have to Today In Parliament
1ent " ... . , ZiSHm* t» the ^problems of "oowS-f^H ’"no^dv Zl SflK own^uritv^dff was ‘ HOUSE OF LORDS
Perhaps stiff more significant, tbp regions.” b ’ ^LnH a Wh a t RritIfn chn.llri h^ II: Diplomatic and Other Pri
iere had been a fall in each of There was a great deal of de £ ded - , fn*PhlS riv.nriS ^hiif n *« B'lL Anguilla BHI and Ed
ip Six countries in the ratio of powerful argument to be . wanted the aseold nvalrv JJ* thC Nato cabon 'Milk) BUI. 2nd rde.
ipir export costs and prices brought forward, both about the betiveen France and Germany to framework and not out HOUSE OF COMMONS
elative to tbeir borne prices. freedom within the Six for in- f^main tirmiv ounea and not to «j? SB PTirial tn Rritnln ” 2 - 30: Debate on the Cornuu
“This is crucially important dividual countries to pursue he re^awd bv an alliance of MSenuai to oma m Market i3rd day),
ecause it means that each of what regional policies they hostility towards Bntam. In his “That is why I wished to say ■■
i_ _ M#hir>w frti-m ihp t-hmitfht risrhi and a «rini*iiTar view, cacti nf tnese aims would ft ie npcessar\' for Britain to be
FRL: Consolidated Fund Bill. Mr HEATH replied that as Far
rem. stages: Motion on codes of as h® could see Mr Lipton had
ease now make amends? ’’ v 'de adequate safeguard against
Mr HEATH renlied that as far POjrntial abuse.
. Enst of Engl/tntl Show
RECORD CROWDS
SHOW WAY
TO SURVIVAL
The. power was needed to Organisers of the three-day
pect that the United States with SnEK&ta for welf^T S taken “the crack" ingood fun. meet cases such as international East of England .Show .which
her many pre-occupations would livestock. It therefore did not require any dr u^ traffickers and gambling closed at Peterborough last
maintain her nuclear umbrella MON. AUG. 2: Industrial Rela- amends at all. racketeers, no matter where night, said that total attendances
but make some redeployment of Hons Bill, Lds. amdts. “I am aware he sustained a they came from. had probably -exceeded last
HOUSE OF LORDS
fall, which I was sorry to see.
If he is in any way offended, of
course I- withdraw, but he has
shown no sigh of offence.7-
£5 for minster
A £5 note- from a- mao-on the
JfdPd-pvPrirhiJS nODOay e,se LSLSSi Vh-rSXln shmilri be H: Diplomatic and Other Priw The SPEAKER, Mr Selwjm dole, was the, first donation to
nded everythin.,. Ages BilL Anguilla Bill and Edu- Llovd, rejected a request by Mr York Minster’s appeal for the I rfld - ,E™rei
He wanted the ase^ild nvalrv ^„ hb «f. e L“ U il CT J IS .^ ,lbi “ the Nato nation (Milk) Bill. 2nd rdc. BUCHANAN (Lab., Springburn) £200.000 needed to close the £2 mSi. ChSmA: gSlS?
-f nr an ^mfr.opnn; Hohntp nn rmTKnn pnctflpafmn uuni-lr fnnrl i n “l *nd iwn-hdrac lurnout: Mr W. C-
HOUSE OF COMMONS
had probably -exceeded last
year's 85,000 record. Tbe show
was established four years ago.
Childrrn's Tiltin'! pony: Mr and Mr*
t. V. Etkl-y iCiiwp .Scxuimopi, -Hay-dn-
Wvrt. Hi-fi-fti-dstiirc. Riding puay brood
nwrn: MI-» S. wmchorn (Cabop Delfghl-
mii Mi-linn Munbrny. Shriland pony:
Mr- no,* Mr* R. A. B. Godina (Eaxwav
uf Hrih'-rlrj >. Stowmarkct.
I)pnl.ry : Miss A. Ongifnlr fEryore)
for an emergency debate on the million rcstoratinn work fund.
SMindriK, Dim-. Four-hop* turnout:
2JS0: Debate on the Common unemployment figure of 154,512 an appeal spokesman said J *<>“"?■» 'orrwrry. wand*wofih
I - — . J • I ■ .* I Lulu 7 '.— Llvr comnicrclnl lifrl
ecause it means mat cam ui wucu ick»uji«i pvnuw mir.v
he countries which form the thought right and a singular
lommunity secured a marked record of relative success as b<? assisted by British entry into m the Community, and now I am
mDrovement in their corapeti- well. Every instrument of reg- Eurnoe and would be damaged sorely tempted to add the word
jve export position as a result ional policy used in the United staying out. 'essential. I do not believe that
. * r irs j ..... 2 _ .... Srt 4-Vtir pneitn/if Rnf-am non nffnrn
"That is why I wished to say
It is necessary For Britain to be
in the Community, and now I am
Market (3rd day).
in Scotland.
yesterday.
— Llvr commrrclnl licrf cluw
Mr J. Mam field. Avliby-de-la-Zoucii._
rf going in.
Kingdom was in use somewhere
“ It means, in my view, the in J^e EEC. . . .
prospect of growth led by invest- The o° e thing which ap-
ment and exports, which has peared to be out was
?luded US for so long, W ou.d aod
.ould be ope £ . a matter for Conservatives to
It meant the ^ worry about rather than for
Turing or moving tows irds cunng Labour No country in the Six
1 structural fault w urac foolish as to prefer
Sir Alee Oonglas-Honie
Faster standard
of living rise
Sir ALEC- DOUGLAS-HOME,
in -this respect Britain can afford
to stay out.
“This is a partnership of
equals in which Britain can make
its mark. The Community will
proceed whether we like it or
not.
“ There is a very important
role to play in the future
GECbigsc
colour
1 structural fault which had De- foolish as to prefer „ 31 F -^c.u-uuuL»i J A>-nujML£., orstao j sa tion of Europe in
levilled our economy for so p Foreign Secretary said Mr "J* of ^ security of that
non tnem. Jenkins 5 speech had been inter- nTnUnLi in rpiatinn tn thp acti-
The White Paper had been e sting and thoughtful. “I too thl ipi?-Power^
Powell's challenge somewhat more expansive on the havp concluded durinn the v,c .'.^ “L!!!£v 5_
somewhat more expansive on the
future of sterling, but what, was
concluded during
For these reasons I am quite
ihenomenon you nave pomLeu p r j me mimsiu auu vj j«. ,5 . nn f h P PnnMnent rose bv "VaS 1
,ut in the case of countries iii nnnn “)J ul e* 00 tn ^ '- on J' nen ‘ rose oy nothing gam.
■ hicb shied °bl : “ J want to make it clear 1 fi C |J r e was' 59 °per CheCrS-)
2SS-“ SiSSf SW First
(Government
a.; ...hirh did noL” physical end or srernrie, , s pom- Community (bought they were
urselves wmch did noL § tion as a reserve currency. This better now , and he pre-
i^^ftrikinJh' I affree has 1003 . been j T r ferred an ounce of experience
hmk not so striking^. 1 agree f ourselves and for the world , . Q f t heorv.
hat in the case of other Euro- '° s r a ° wJlo ] e . pretending to sup- 10 * c ° fl in .®° ry " . An .
-nan countries, they- too have * ^ second reserve cur- s L e er eiMtv was
First written
constitution
the apprehension Mr paGET (LaK North amp-
sovereignty was ton , sa j d the political change
SAVE ^
NEARLY
^nnnmv 00 ^ StrUCture W 1 Conservatives now apnea red to of lhe part71cl . s . Under the Coun- change.
' thP stimulating effect bc accepting rtaw. Ten >ejus cil of Ministers no vital inter* we make laws, we will
ugh be es e s?»maticVan e it Zne of ie bright of an ,L° ne coun ^ cou,d have to Tear In mind that they
!j K “ B f nr the S\x but it sterling^ as one. oi me nn B uic.i be overruled. subject to review by a court
dd . _been . u jewels m our Crown. There was no absolute doc- a t Brussels who may declare
The pull of Europe was trine of snv preignty: it was them unconstitutional and order
changing all this to our great concerned with the reality of us to remove them.”
still be verv striking i^cls in ®ur crown. There wa? no a -
fdied and \erv stimulating to The pull of Europe was trine of sovereign l
ur (irnnamv changing all this to our «rcat concerned with the
U Th?sTa? y a choice of crucial national advantage. ^However afld in fluenc
“Unless our ex- . 9« ha0 s C hnuld eHe'^ar P more Wliea W€ inaepenuen
is totally dissimilar Minister sb ould B intent j ong to tbe colonies it was an 2
of every one of the ^ , " h ? t a i S II 2i r oriSSff«? nf sovereign u and was in
lould expect a steady replacement or « j. VO c*hle. There were some w
nportance. ‘ unless our _ex-
crience is totally dissimilar
om that of every one of the
ix. we should expect a steady
nd continued improvement in
iwcr and influenc. Thj S was a " formidable
When we save independence change” in the way our society
tbe colonies it was an act had been organised and our
sovereignty and was irre- tradition.
position
sterling argued it was a bad thing to do.
Profits of entry
rc performance of our export holders ^ s h r ^ There were olhers who equally Mr b 0Y D-CABP ENTER fC,
•dustries. not merely in exports there must be - av . held that to cr&ate independent Kingston upon Thames) said he
1 wards the Six but to the rest undertaking a stiff fi. ert r p countries was. tar an act of convinced that had entry
f the world as a whole. ment ^ con- sovereignty, adding to our own c p ° 0 n ^ ible in the early 1960s
“ There should in my view be be nn a " mternational stature m the Bri t ain wou ld be a great deal
?vourab!e factors for the striction - .... modem world. m«™ nr«enpmn« than she »'as
Down again -Mamlay aSS
Now £189 at Gunys
■ or£24d(Hwi
striction on ourselves. modern world.
It would also be undesirable - j f j s certainly true in my
Britain would be a great deal
more prosperous than she was
■dance of payments to set off It woura also ue -Jf IS ccnainij rrue in my .
te unfavourable ones we hear For the rest of ^e world, be- mi nd that an act 0 F so vereign ty H e‘ expressed concern at the
rj much about.
muen auoui. cause it would mean either a is ce rtainly nol inconsistent with effects ^ cntry 0Q those
Beyond that it meant the Further J^ rv j- b “ rdc I J entering a partnership. fixed incomes and pensions. We
ospert of exporWed^ grorth wh.ch^, , Sovereignty shared Sh°apd
If it was possible to argue that prosperity as a result of join-
our national character was fitted ing the Market,
so to rule it was equally possible There was a substantial oba-
rospect of export-] eo growtti oouar. - r n Sovereignty shared werc tol< i cnere * a
nd curing structural faults in unable tn -tarn at _ pre^nr .or sovereignly snareu a increase of wealth, and
he economy. r .a rrd uc non jn wonn •mmoav, Jf w . as po „ ible ro argue lha t prosperity as a result oF jom-
“ I am not, therefore, pessi- which would he cauaiti u - our national character was fitted ing the Market,
ilstic about the economic able for otner rea nn. so t0 njjc lt was equally possible There was a substantial obto-
pportunities which entry' will A npw international jrcsene ^ hope that our national charac- cation to use part of this to help
• ,e us. Indeed in my view the asset was obviously neeoea. was evcn morc fi tted f or a those who were not able to profit
• onomic case has become some- either in European qr in wioer artnersh j p ,- n a community. personally as a result oF entry,
hat stronger rather than terms like the setting up of a h n r p-=ent office he found And to show that we valued
raker in the past few years.” world reserve bank end mn»inu. J almost C ?n tolerable handi- Hie links with the old Common-
Hp did not now share the away from the reserve role of it an al most imoicraoic nano. AusCra]ia . New Zealand
! _____ — ~ ' and Canada, be suggested that
the Government should take
power to make red pro cal agree-
ments with those countries per-
mitting the free movement of
their migrant people.
We should not get into the un-
i happy position where Austra-
lians, New Zealanders and
Canadians were treated as alien
while Germans and Italians came
here as of right
Mr GORDON WALKER (Lab.,
Leyton) said he had been in-
volved in the critical discussions
.Pdker in the past tew years- worm re»er%£ ‘"J t “ n a ] mQSt intolerable handi-
He did not now share the 1 away from the resene roie oi 1 u au «»»
MANCHESTER LINERS
CONTAINERSH1PS
bring conveyor belt regularity to shipping
twice weekly sailings to
CANADA &THE U.S. GREAT LAKES
This 19"GEC Colour TV costs only £189 cash
at Currys, or £24 down with 3 years to pay on
personal Joan terms. And these personal loan
terms include guaranteed service by skilled
Currys engineers. An even bigger, 22"GEC set
costs only £29 down and a huge 25" H MV
only £35 down. The fair trade-in offer you get
on your black and white set brings down the
price even further. What is more you can choose
from all the best makes - G EC, Ferguson, Bush,
-HMV, Pye, Philips -and have any one of them
on free home trial. You get straight answers
to all your questions with no hard sell.
You even get your money back if you change
your mind within a week. And you end up
proving how much cheaper buying your own
set is with service than renting.
with gitaraittee -1 semes
iSSliSSjr 19 " 9 EG Colour TV
This is big screen colour TV to-surt everybody.
The design is simple — the cabinet less bulky than you would
expect with colour. The teak veneer and silvertrim add elegance
and the front facing controls make programme switching
and colour adjustment easy.
RECOMMENDED PRICE -£220r?Er
CURRYS Or on 3 year personal loan
Msii raiffiE iS II raBTOssr
ItHSN PiUtiE 9. 12. 24 or 36 months.
Matching stand £4.40 EXTRA
YOU SIT Ml YOU WANT AT
It's Your Charter of Fair Trading.
■400 ELECTRICAL STORES ALL OVER BRITAIN
FOR THE ADDRESS OF YOUR NEAREST BRANCH
SEE YOUR LOCAL TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
The Daily Telegraph, Friday, J ulg 33, 1971
OFFICIAL APPOINTMENTS
L
□CA
L GO
V
ERNMEN
T
AUSTIN KNIGHT LIMITED
LEGAL
SENIOR ASSISTANT SOLICITOR
(£2,MI-£5J40 pj. induiivcl
ROYAL BOROUGH OF KINGSTON UPON
THAMES
AppUctmU should have hud aouod flineriff
u-icrfEiK 1 * jJuefl admhriofl. preferably in local
gownmiait. 11 m post wiH. however, be
■ttmcUvc U> any soWcRor in prtvaie practic*
now wish (no further to develop bis Irani stuffs
in d post wWcb wiM also u II end an opportunity
to min valuable admiolrtralivu experteucc-
The hEral applicant wlH have «rt«tom-i tow®
phumira experience ragrihri' witit a tf-orauff*
hDowfeduo Of eoBvayancliw. Hr will be a
competent advocate. Financial n^anjataorp
towards house pnrdbwe eottr and removul
expeam, and todcrhM nilnwnncco payuWc. la
approved raws. AppHcnbon form* Md turner
detaUa from the Town Clerk. Gimabaii.
•Kmwtoo upon Thames iTei.: 01*546 £121:
Extension 226). CKibuw date for receipt or
BPfdloMioas — 111* August, 1971,
DEVELOPMENT &
CONSTRUCTION
PRINCIPAL ASSISTANT ENGINEER
(TRAFFIC!
SITUATIONS VACANT
BUN'ON f minim ttiTi wttlim)
and SEMI - DISPLAYED
(with Unas of white space.
tnd>:nt9 or double - lino
capital*) Cl -40 per line.
While space la charged per
uno taken. In addition to
thB text
DISPLAYED ilnMde a box
rule, with larqe typo and
block* i — £24 per Simla
column inch end pro rare.
Minimum 1 inch. Do not
appear Odder a classified
beading.
DIRECTORATE OF HOUSING SERVICES
iiswrwIW-lfMMiRti
(P.0.R.1 (D)) £2,646-£3,039
po i (cl £Z.895-£3j294 F-a- in*
LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY
BOROUGH ENGINEER & PURVEYOR'S
DEPARTMENT
The auccesafttl candidate wlU be required to
lead Traffic Section dealing with all aspects
of traffic engineering. Essential U»er Car
Allowance. Applicant* bhuuld be Chartered
Ena inters. Application forma tram Town
Cterk. Town Hail, £8 IE A. returnable by
Sth August. 1971. quoting refcranco DT.
Applications are invited for this new post
in the Planning and Implementation (Housing)
Section. The successful candidate will be
responsible for co-ordinating the Council’s day-
Hday activities in General Improvement Areas,
and for acting as the focal point for enquiries
from residents and landlords under Section 28
of the Housing Act, 1969, and also for pro*
noting the improvement of deficient properties
which are not in General Improvement Areas.
PUBLIC HEALTH
WEIGHTS AND
MEASURES
CHIEF PUBLIC HEALTH INSPECTOR
CITY OF ST. ALBAN5
.Applications arc Invited far tbr above
appointment which wJlt become vacant in
AiiaiiM . Solar* within ttir Principal OtHcrr'a
rang* 1 i£3.S36 to £3.949 p.a.) plus lump
sum cur allowance!. Application (prill and
details of appointment may be obtained
from Town Clerk. 38 S. Peter's Street. St.
Alban’s, Herts, by wham rompleieti aDpIlcu-
ilonr. should be received by till /Voflow 19.1.
CHIEF INSPECTOR OF WEIGHTS AND
MEASURES
P.O. Ranee 1 (£2,751 -£3.1 50)
^ COUNTY OF SALOP
Candidates should have an appropriate
university degree or a relevant final professional
qualification of equal status, a basic knowledge
of home improvement work, and have worked
RETAIL TRADE
TRAINING OFFICER
(BACON)
Further particulars of ffito appointment may
be ob to) trod from !*?. CKrK or the County
Council, Shirt* all. Abbey Fore gale, SUruws-
Aury. SYS 6ND. lu wham applications
should be sent by 16tb August, 1971.
for at least two years after qualification, in the
housing or allied field.
CLERK’S
ADMINISTRATION
FINANCIAL
Starting salary according to qualifications
and experience; car allowance; removal
expenses payable ia approved cases.
SENIOR COMMITTEE CLERK
LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY
The Council m seeking to appoint an open-
faced local government officer to this post
within the Committee Section ol Lhe Town
Clerk’s Department to be responsible for
fbe servicing ul ddc of the major cammi tines.
Sound experience of cam mil lee work non-
orally and a mature pcnoiiallty arc essential
rranirmai'nbi. The appointment wHJ be
as (tie Senior Officer - !, Seale of £".”SO-
£2,893 line), i Qualm cation bar at £2.7001.
Apo heat Ion form-, are available frum the
Town Clerk, Town Hall. Marc Street. Hack-
ney. E81 TEA. returnable by 9U1 August,
|971. Meow auote reference DT,
SENIOR TECHNICAL A5SI5TANT/
ECONOMIST
Salary £2,646 hi £3,039
LONDON BOROUGH OF REDBRIDGE
A senior past In a new Financial Planning
and Development Croup of lbe Borough
Treasurer's Department. To bo responsible
Cor the rmoamlc and financial appraisal of a
Further details and application forms from
the Director of Housing Services, Churchill
House, Green’s End , Woolxcich, London
SE18 6HY . Closing dates 6th August.
wide range of project* and be Intimately
involved in long range financial pfenning and
rcseorrh. Suitably qualified applicants should
have a good working knowledge of modern
financial management tnctrafqucb. be enthusi-
astic and forward-looking In approach to all
nssionments, 80 % removal tipemm (limit
£30j house purchnw advance or Vlas' housing
may be available. Application forms from,
and re luma Me to. the Borough Treasurer,
23126. Otcmento Road. iirord. Essex.
Closing dale: 19lb August. 1S7T.
LONDON BOROUGH OF GREENWICH
Applicants should cave a
good retail background,
and have the right person-
ality and appearance to
conduct training meetings
and demorsrrjtiQns. and 10
choir seminars.
THE CORPORATION OF GLASGOW
PLANNING DEPARTMENT
The salary paid will ne
commensurate with Use ex-
perience and other qualifica-
tions at the successful can-
didate. A car will ne
provided and all expenses
incurred on travel and oc-
cotnmjdition m connection
will, hi, work will be rc-
Imbur-ed. There Is « Pen-
sion Scheme. In addition,
the successful candidate wili
be given every facility to
expand further bis technical
kiu.-.v ledge of bicon.
Applicants nre requested to
send a brief rfeumc of their
retail b.ickgroun j and
General anal '.fie. a* ions to
RT. 15734. Daily Tele-
graph. E.C.4.
Applications are invited
for the following posts : —
1 CheAkeGmnqrCoundl
Youth Service
Hyde County Youth Cen-
tre — Deputy Leader
(Woman) Sale Ashton -on-
Morsey County Youth Cen-
tre— Leader.
Salary scale J.N.C. (£1070
to £1620 per annum in
th* case of the leader in
charge at Sale.)
Win* ford County Youth
Centre — Deputy Teacher
Leader and Asdihnf
Teacher / Leader Hazed
Grove County Youth Cen-
tra - — Assistant Teacher
Loader.
(Salary Scale — Burnham
plus Head of Department
allowances of £334 for
the Deputy Leader and
£222 for the Assistant
Leaders.)
Application forms and
further particulars are
available from
The Director of
Education, County Hall,
Chester, CHI ISQ.
Closing date
6th August.
Applications are invited
for the post of: —
PRINCIPAL LECTURER/
SENIOR LECTURER
LECTURER 11
DATA PROCESSING
[non-numorican
To teach and organise this
subject « Diploma, and
Diner Graduate and Boat
Graduate levels to the
Polytechnic.
Farther detail, and application
form tram
Head ot Pep* tw eet of
Science,
Oxford Polytechnic,
Heading ton.
OXFORD. 0X3 OOP.
dosing date 10 Angiiet 1071.
EXPORT SALES
All application*! willl he
treated ui the etrlciest can-
fideacn
COUNTY
ARCHITECTS
DEPARTMENT
CHIEF PUNNNG OFFICER
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
£2,106-£2,751
Applications are invited from Associate
Members oF the Institute of Structural Engin-
eers to assist the existing Structural Engineer
ia the design, detailing, checking and site
supervision of a variety of structures in diverse*
materials. Essential car user, subsistence,
removal and lodging allowances in approved
cases. Application forms from the Clerk of the
Council, Couoty Hall, Trowbridge, returnable by
16th August
THE MEDICAL COLLEGE OP
ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL
West Southfield, London EC1A 7BE
(REDEVELOPMENT PROMOTION)
POC. IV— £3,966 X £141— £4,389
(Under Review)
In order to facilitate a comprehensive view of the prob-
lems arising from Glasgow's enormous programme of
redevelopment, the department Is sub-divided into the
following functions viz.
Development Plan Redevelopment Implementation
Redevelopment Promotion Develoament Control
Hedeveiopment Promotion Development Control
Each of these main sections is under the direction of a
Chief Planning Officer who in turn is responsible to the
Directorate.
Applications are invited from Chartered Town Planners
possessing wide professional and administrative experi-
ence for this principal appointment of Chief Planning
Officer (Redevelopment Promotion).
Heath field Engineering,
manufacturers of a range at
HEAVY DUTY DUMP
TRUCKS, is expanding its
pinrkcls overact* anti
w ishes lo appoint da experi-
enced EXPORT SALESMAN
who would bo rc-puaebls
tor carrying out Uns sell-
ing function. Applicants
should be currently engaged
in soiling Construction
Equipment overseas, prirftr-
obly In the European and
Middle - Eastern wrrttorias.
ai.d be Co mil Lor with nego-
tiating with distributors, A
working knowledge ot
French; German Is desirable.
The post carries consider-
able prospects {or advance-
ment. Senior Staff status
appUia with non -con tribu-
tary j miasma scheme and
other Cringe bonefila.
Salary wdl be by nego-
tiation.
Applications will ba
troaLcd In strict coohdeoca.
(Ret PI45BISARI. FersodRal
hleaager. HeaUihold En-
gineering. Sbaldon Road.
Newton Abbot. Devon.
THE S.O.S. SOCIETY
RESIDENT WARDEN
Applications are In wired
from single men over the
age uf 30. fur lbe post ot
UARDLN nt e hcwtel tor
29 ex-, ■Senders situuled In
The successful candidate will be expected to bave had
extensive experience in all aspects of the preparation,
design and promotion of Comprehensive Development
Areas; negotiations with developers on major projects;
preparing reports for Corporation Commi ttees and
attendance at such meetings.
EXHIBITIONS DESIGNER
salary 1 . 1.060 p.a . al> found.
Four n tel., annual holiday.
Writ* in first instance to: —
Gcn-.-roJ S'.-crcury
24 Cul.inJ Gardens. Lon-
don. b.Wi.
Application forms obtainable from the Principal Adminis-
trative Officer, 84 Queen street. Glasgow Cl (Telephone
041-552-4477, extension 383), should be submitted by
6 August, 1971
Thu Conned of Industrial
Design .requires aa Exhibi-
tion* Designer to deslna and
supvcv1s« iIk InstaJIanon ot
dlbplnyu and room nettings
In cbe Design Centra- Can-
didates should bave bad full-
traie art school training la a
relevant subject such as ex-
hibition or Interior dnsigo
followed by practical cx-
5ENI0R
LAND NEGOTIATOR
Applications are invited from medically quail Bed persona
for the post of Lecturer in Anatomy iformerly classed as
a Demonstratorship) tenable at the above Medical College
from 1st October next or as soon as possible thereafter.
Salary on the scale £2,491-£3,4]7 per annum plus £100
London Allowance.
The post is suitable for an Intending Primary F.B.CS.
candidate, and the point of entry to the salary scale
would take account of medical qualifications.
Application forms, obtainable from the Secretary of the
College at the above address, are returnable completed
to the Dean not later than the 28th August, 1971. .
LOCAL GOVERNMENT (Ctd.)
fields. The starting sulury.
according to a-je. qualifica-
tions ana experience will be
EYFE COUNTY COUNCIL
90a*L WORK
DEPARTMENT
bans ana experience will be
either in the range £ 1 . 474-
El. 907 or £1.907-£2.155.
rising to a maximum of
£2.o 1 4. The scales are
under review. Thera era
Sual-y Home Limned re-
quire lo apnoisi a fully ex-
perienced S'Diur Lead Nrqu-
tiaior capable, in due course,
of l.ikiaa lull managerial
revDaiiMbiUdas for Land De-
panmrnt.
The nrcCeired age of the
applicant Is between 35/43
years with a background of
experience in all aspects ot
private bouse hulhilnq.
Excellent salary, conditions
aod Company tar wlH be
offered lu the right appli-
cant. Write to. or (eieohoae.
S i wBBJca or 4 1 * weeks botl-
y a yenr antf a contrlbu-
day a yenr and a contribu-
tory pension scheme. —
Please write lor an applica-
tion form and further de-
rails to the Establishment
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF fatt 'gTih^E^Jm^-t
SOCIAL WORK Officer i quoting No. 33 Ik
!RES, Sf.^ JSHF" j&tiw:
B rs A. Cc-lver. Son ley
omes Limited. MeyUada
_ AppHcation* are InvHed
for ttro shove post from
persons wHb BDaroarlate pro-
fesslonal qualiacatiaits. and
wtth axtenslve praotlcal ex-
perience. In one .or more of
the _ social work <UscipHo.ro
nuw incorporated wlituu
Social Work. Departments to
Avenue. HrmeJ Hem
Herts. Tel.: H/H 2:
UNIVERSITIES, COLLEGES, ETC.
WARWICKSHIRE EDUCATION gS?
• COMMITTEE 197
NUNEATON TECHNICAL
COLLEGE AND SCHOOL
OF ART
Principal: H. . Johnson, B Bug.,
C-Eng.. M.l.Mech.E.
DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS
AND GENERAL STUDIES
SENIOR LECTURER IN
MANAGEMENT STUDIES
HALIFAX EDUCATION COM-
MITTEE. ASSISTANT EDU-
CATIONAL PSYCHOLOGIST.
Required tram 1st October.
1971, In lbe School Poycho-
Ipglcal Service and Child
Guidance Service. Salary Scale
— Souibnry Grade 1. Appli-
cants should hold on honours
dears* In Psychology or Its
equivalent together with reach-
ing . experience and post
gradnaLc training. Candidate
without (he pooturanoata
diploma in educational psycho-
COCNTY BOROUGH OF
_ BRIGHTON
BRIGHTON POLYTECHNIC
Work ^ Scotland! ?$&!
Applicsotfi must possess
sound administrative and
managerial abUliT.
AgpIIcatioa forms and
t urtfter J-ituK frooi tiro
IIr«Xor of Social Work.
GERMAN KNITTING
FACTORY
aboot 40 Urns, from Hnm-
u^arAd , ‘?!& , ‘!rpcff a 3SS;
(DM knitting mncbloevL
ADMINISTRATIVE
ASSISTANT
Application forms and
t urtfter J-ituK from tiro
llrtdor of Social Work,
social Work Department
Headquarters, Fk-m (union
Rood. Glenrotbea. File (Tel.
Glenrothes 3745k and
should be returned tn the
!qgy may also apply with a
view Co being seconded by the
Applications ore required imme.
dlntily for is, post 'of Senior
Lecturer in Management Studln,
from persons with appropriate
qudlificnUons and industrial experi-
ence.
This is an important section of
HOSPITAL SERVICES
SHEFFIELD NO. 2 HOSPITAL
MANAGEMNT COMMITTEE,
HOSPITAL CHURCH Of
ENGLAND CHAPLAIN
MLDDLEWOOD AND
WHARNCLIFFE HOSPITALS
A full-time Chaplain Is re-
quired lor the above hospitals
which urr ullualed in tbc
same grounds on lbe North
Wnt boundary of tbs City
af SbclficM.
Middle wood Hospital ac-
commodates approximately
1.500 psychiatric patients
and the Whurncliffe HospiLal
ia a small uenarat unit with
129 beds.
Tbc Chaplain In addition
tn his responsibilities for
caring for the spiritual needs
of the patients and resident
staff, will aba ba expected to
the Department and a person b
required with proven successful
Industrial and teaching axperlence.
The successful candidate will take
charge of the orga ni sa tio n and de-
velopment of the institution of
Works Managers end National
Examinations Board In ScpervlBory
Studies Courses and all allied and
allied and other management
Mouses.
I tin post'd* available from 1 st
Scplenjbtr- 7971. but can. If
necessary, he held open until 1st
January. 1972. • ~
The salary lor tiffs post wQl
be in accordance with the Burn-
barn (Further Education) Scales.
I.c . Senior Lecturer: E2.527 to
C2.B72.
Authority, os soon aflor
appointment aa a place could
be secured, on a one-year post-
graduate course in educational
B ychology, on the nuderscand-
g that be or she would return
ror not lees Oran two years'
service with the Authority.
The successful applicant will
work under the direction Of the
Educational Psychologist In the
CnQd Guidance Service and the
School Psycholog Iced Sendee.
Tbe Authority maintains
schools for E.B.N. and delicate
children and there is a well
organised Remedial Education
Service In addition to sperial
required In tha Academia
Registrar's Department tor
duties mainly required in
the Academic Registrar's De-
portment for duties mainly
concerned with examinations
edmtnlstraUofl, statistics A
records.
should be returned to the
undersigned by not later
thou fourteen days from the
appearance of this adver-
tisement. Please „..uuoie
REFERENCE NUMBER
DSW 1 52 . DT on comoleled
forms. Previous applicants
need not apply as cond dera-
tion will tie given to their
original applications.
Salary up to £7.776 p.a..
according to qurtlflcaUons
and experience. This ' Is a
temporary past, bnt con-
sideration wOl be given to
ifa, becoming a permanent
appointment in the osar
future.
JAMES M. DUNLOP.
County Clerk.
Couoty Building*,
CUPAR, EUc.
Further particulars and ap-
plication form, returnable by
dews supervised by the Edu-
. cations I Psychol aglet. The ser-
vice bee recently moved Into
new premises which offer ex-
cellent facilities for research
and experimentation and plans
mart for the establishment of a
Hostel tor mildly maladjusted
children. . Applications. bv
letter, giving full details of
qualifications and experience,
together with the names and
addresses of three referees, to
the Deputy Chief Education
Officer, West House, King
Cross Street. Halifax. York-
shire. by the Sth August.
plication form, recurmoie py
16th August, on application
to the Bursar (A9/7). Brigh-
ton Polytechnic. Moolse-
coomb, Brighton. BN2 4GJ.
LECTURER GRADE I
FOR LAW AND
ECONOMICS
play his full part as a mem-
ber of (he hospital mnlti-
divcipllnnry ream. He win
co-operate with local
churches in the community,
den-log training facilities for
clergy. Ordlnond 9 and the
like work inter- profession-
ally with Free Chureb and
Roman Catholic Hospital
Chaplains and other uro/es-
ainnal hospital officers.
The past offers a challena-
ing opportunity to develop
the Hospital Chaplain's
rule beyond that of the
traditional institutional ap-
proach. - _
Tha salary acsla s El. 704
Applications are Invited for the
above appointment to take effect
from lot September, 1971. or as
noon a, poroibic alter Uut daoe.
required lo leach Law and Econo-
odes, mainly to O-N.C. and
q.N.D. In Lnstneos Studies but
also as up prop rial* to Inter JPro-
i c b rionjl. P«-E.B.S S-. and I.W.M.
day and emnlos clnssoa- Appli-
cants should Tro professionally
qtullfiad and have soma teaching
^The'sSniy for this post will be
In accordance with the Burnham
■ Further Education) Scales, i.e..
rising by annual I acre men is
to £1,965 par annum, and
U tha successful applicant
elects to live In the com-
munity. a rent slhrwasca of
£275 is also payable.
The appointment will be
for a five-year period In
the first Instance.
Applications giving fall
personal particulars and ex-
perience toa riber with the
names and addresses of two
referees should be hirworded
Lecturer 1: £1.230 tn £2.075
with additional payments for cer-
tain onollficnMCBia.
Further particulars and forms
Of appUcalion are obtainable from
the principal. Technical College
and School of Art. Hinckley Road.
Nuneaton, to whom they should
be returned as soon as possible.
F. P. B. BROWNING.
Acting County Education Officer
to the Group Secretary,
Mfddlewood Hospital. Shef-
field. SA 1TP not Inter than
the 31st August. 1971
UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL
DEPARTMENT OF _
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
RESEARCH CHEMIST
required to asslsr rewarrti
group working on synthesis
ot enzymes. Experience in
synthetic organic chemistry
desirable. Minimum quallfi-
coiioas ore is.Sc- with
canons are
Honours in Chemistry or
equivalent, initial troWur m
range £1 .45S-E1.914 per
annum. —{.Application form
may be abtul&cd from
An appointment Is In bo
made in the autumn of a
Building Works Inspector/
Clerk of Wuiks op a substan-
tial building project lu North
Uni buildlnn project lu North
London. Experience u( luuh
quality huiahr- ana lha (nlu-
grollun ol ini-ctunlcul and
electrical survicca lx aviunil.il-
Thu-L 1 wishing to he con-
sidered fur interview I prob-
ably in August) should wruu
now lo Lhc Cansultin>i bn-
g uieers a( the address buiuw
u lv inn resume ui experience
anil purauuuj details.
FG5FORD. PAVRY
<k FAHTNEHS
Ahbn House. Vlciunn SlreaL
London GWIH 6LY.
COUNTY BOROUGH OP
BRIGHTON
LARGE COLLEGE In N.W
London requires lor Scplomper-
WORK STUDY
ASSISTANTS
£942-£1776
LONDON BOROUGH OF RICH
MONO UPON TH4MFS.
HLOHWXYS SUrFUnSTLN-
KNT (CS.211-C2 856h TO
1. ExpvneaceU Teacher uf
Shorthand and Tipeivriirnu
-Highly paid pernhiueni lull
lime Appuinimint. 2. Trainee
Teacher ol Shurtliund and type.
wrlilnn. EkcIIi nr uppnrtuituy
lor well aducatcil iv.ucrlcni.cd
Secreliiry Inli'rcsied In Ic'icliinfi
Telephone Miss rVsbtua (Jl-44a
9831
MANAGER lor dispatch depart
ment. Ability la control stall
eroentidi. Knowledge of ex
fpr " n - fihriik-
iivnnn M-mnn'-inniil Bervlces
si-ciion A nolle. in's slioiKd
Have for mu work .iii-lv
traiirina. nmnlc.il rvnivinn-c
U5 d ,h r ra
s*. • 'X' mn«t
"“"Hfic-itlun.
AWIIlv la drive r>s.-nllal.
on«- bulary uegulmblc
Mr Llshiik. 734 7441
be responsible for Maintenance NEGOTIATOR lor caiabllriiM
u '"‘ ror nllow-
R ’■mov.it rwnws piiui.
HniLsIngl Irulqlna allnuMnce
m.iy or ,iv.* I lul.tr in .r,r"i5
circumstance*, staff cuatcen.
COST STUDY OFFICER
£2. 1 06- £2. 751 (under review)
and Repair rd ^opproxlmnjrtt
335 milt - * of hlnlrwsy Includno
metro pi lit ra roads. The work
will ,il*n Include tiro super-
vi»fon ol slrccf sweepltifi and
uneney in Oxlurd Si.. Icitinn
lurtiL-tieU prupiTDcs. Guud
prospects lor the right person
Salary aeg plus can}.— dll
ni*y oc aoiumcu
nTdiStrar ‘1 he UniwruU.
fSS“ box 147.
L69 3BX. Qoo» «*. RV«
7581 i DT.
A DEPUiY CAlERER
SiTB&VWttaS
EjudK*a& and a to ff ul
350 arc riyjldcnt- A vailable
posiLiun for a P«
cun offering al leaat two
«2„ column .. experience
The mcccMful applicant
will be in ebarpa of a cost
study team at present being
eel up within the Finance
Division. The post requires
a person with drive and fo-
ltiflUve who will hnvc had
post qualify tun experience in
a aenlar capacity. Know-
Mnc of higher rdacation is
desirable but not esrethl.
Further paniealiK may M
obtained trom the Sctrrlcry,
Maul eftester Ptdittcflnic.
Lower Ormond SlrreL Mon-
chesiar. Ml 5 6RX. to wbnm
appliratloos quoting two re-
feree*- must ba seat by 15
Aunust. 1971. Pleasa quota
8175.
vision or sire* - * wnwpug, «-» ■ 4j) U370.
tnaint“03n« sUr-r-t Uers. NATIONAL AND LOCAL
grass verges . *c. Mu«t hnve | GDI LRNMENT GFFIULHB
ecvrral ycara rvprneiror In
CITY OF CARDIFF
fa) SENIOR
CONVEYANCING
ASSISTANT
rSotrinr Officer Gride
t2.106-E3.75I p.a-)
a senior supervisory nn*'t!na
In lhc eOrKI rarKon mdd-trv
and he lar.ibt qu.Vffird
<i..iv.H.S., H.N.C. or i^u*y-
ptenti. Conuu-nrlng saferv
dependent upon qanlificnl Ion-* i
and rxpTlerer. r.M^ntKil u - .*r
enr anowancr. Hotultui con-
sMered. A*sHtance with re-
moval ptpi”im- 9. Forms from
Burr.ugti Englnrrr uf Sur-
vrvor. Muntetpal Ofilrc-*.
Sheen Lane London. S.W.14.
101-876 54*31. rirturdaWc
tvtthln 14 dtiv?..
Apisfleniinns giving derails
nf one. qu.iiiiiratliuv.. ex-
perienee. pr.-.-ut (ln ,i nrt _
".r. 1 ' .■rapolnunenis l.iaciber
wttii Hie n.'mi". r.[ j wu
crri , Jiwnn us nncvfblu lor
Town Clerk, luwn HaLL
Beluhioa. D£X| t J4 " MOlu
GUI LRNMENT OFFIULHB
ASEOCIATION. Flnuare Ur.
parimcni. appointment UF
BtCTION H E.MJ — UI'bM-
UITUKL. AppIiLallom, hiq In- Ivnii.^
vlted lor.tbr pint ot brcuun I you, \y EDITOR wanted for «.
•••; YOUNG; .
QUALIFIED
ACCOUNTANTS
ACCOUNTS AND.
GENLRAL CLhRK
'equireo by t sport Finance
baby in the fiiy. _
We arr carrenUy aoekiag
nen'K OlHLincd CHART-
ERED ACCOUNTANTS .10
Join oux AUDIT DEPART-.
MENT. Tra.aran coarse, pro-
vide Inst rue aoa is modern
juditisq lechatourt wiilch
arc roaollcd In F«rm.
There could be optOTimuy.
aw to specialise, alar sa
initial period, ia InvesUM.
Uoa woric. manaBcmcot ser-
vices <-c t«wljoa. saiarres
are at nil carren: rate aaa
substantially above for <m.
'itaottiaa aocoa ntan a.
An uiV-r-.-ting e B reer i«J r jouog
m*n or w jm«n him •»
ii. iliu-a: i.u.S.'.ri ?p'j u-u tor
o jurc Uurk’. Bookkcipinq and ot
ainh.Uii riper iv n-:* ' v .'i u . ; r d ll ^
jilv.in'aqe. 5 j:.M £i CI
■ m a\* qu^i]DCu>iuii7 fif d rt ni p r{ ifltl
on; Bl sue £,1 S??;hJra —
c a-. Plus luuchcod TMChere.-—
Write la A.A.laiOB Daily
leitiranh. EX. 4.
An ocganisatiOD. which
provides ibe retail trade
with a technical advisory
senr.ee oo ill matters lo
connection with bacon.
Invites applications tor Che
jjasl uf Kami Trade Train-
ing Officer.
Tbe Euccsssful applicant
will work wuh ab estab-
lisbed tram of speaaUsts.
Hi» duties will include
bacon cutting demonstra-
tions. conducting trade
seminars oo bacon, and
trainuig personae! at all
levels, ELe w|l] work both
independently and also in
conjunction with recog-
nised authorttatita bodies In
the trade throughout the
country.
Please write to the &aa
Partner, fipiwr ud Peo-er,
56-60.- 5t AW. Lon-
don. £C5A 8BJ. or, F.O,
BO* 498.
ManffitesW. MfiO ZED.
COMPUTER STAFF
CHIEF ACCOUNTANT
University of Salford
Required by old establMurf
shipping and forwarding aacnta to
the control and preiM ration
tknaoclni and managument accounis
and the day W day supervision or
14 BcrauflUng staff Iff toSEra-neSo'
Preferred age >50-45. Saiwy n
Ltablc £2.300-£2.500 teJn-taS
assurance, contributory
ACCOUNTANT
scheme. Please apply “L-SSncJja
giving rull demit, lo
Director. IntcrnatlOnst
Co. Ltd.. North Huuac, Ous-r
Road, Brentwood. Ease*-
Salary Scale: £3£21-M,131
Following the .ippointmeot of
tho orraent boldrr ot Finance
Officer at ttro University ot Hull.
or THE coig F storage board
The Cold Storage Board of
applications are invited for Che ZamWa my,*, Bpplicatiom. £««
post of Accountant. ... suitably qualified and experienced
£ e d5ar , sussr*» ’S
XS^aSVtr, ^SSSfSS;-. CHIEF accountant
to” 1 . CHIEF ACCOUNTANT
«r> planning and control and the
continued dwrlopmcnt ol com- The successful applicant wui
purer based procedures. He be responsible 10 the General
win also be required to advise Manager for the control ol ail
ani report on biitnelal aspects u> e Hoard's finances ana mo
■.■I University business. irainlng of Zambians.
Applications, giving «ull .Par- .
fioi'iirs -jf age, qujlincatlom,. Appolnuneut would be on a
experience and present salary uirea year Contract wub a.ler-
ti..j>iber wllh cbe names and U|DI | gratuity of up to 35?v O*
a3firrs>ei ot two relcreea. gbould | 2 , B tutL salary.
he sent to the Registrar University
ol ti'ullord. Salford M3 4WT. br
16 August. 1971. quoting
197 J. quoting [ c|u ^^_
in ' ora avall-
Otber terms and conditions ln-
ACCOUNTANT
Family passaoes and ^loyvaoccs
Tor muisoort or
appoliuniont and on
ut the Lontract. house with b-terc
rurniturc is provided at a
ccuuonilc root. Annuo] leave of 40
daya. Medical aid. <-ar loon ete-
Woliruso Limited. the
rapidly expandinu Fo>.>d
Group of lbe John Lewis
Fartnersblp require a P^rt-
■ luu lifted Accnuntimt. ALCA
... In
Commencing saJary would de-
pend on previous experience and
quailhea lions. Minimum eon 40
years.
or equivalent, age Co-30, to
be baaed at >hc New Head
Ollii-u in Bracknell. Berk-
shire. Pav up t n £2,000
per annum «c turd ing tn
quali fica tii >m.
Duties include management
t .1 medium-sized office, pro-
duction ot mcmtlily accounts
budgetary cuntrol and maa-
aoLuicnr Iniorniation.
The Board is an expanding
orgaolzatiun With the national
ropoiuiblllty for meat dlstribu-
tlun throughout Zambia.
Applications opnulnJnp full
derails ol qualifications, previous
experience. Marital status and
availability, should be addressed
to: —
• F"ur weeks holiday par
annum
- Front shoring schema
“ Subsidised dining room
■ sickness pay and regular
salary review
The General Manaprr.
Cold Storage Board of Zombi*.
P.O. Box 1915-
LUSAKA. ZAMBIA.
Write or telephone for an
Application Form to: The
Senior Staff Manager. Wait-
rir-e Limited, 421 Norwich
Road. Grecaford, Middlesex.
TtRAJWEE.
COST ACCOUNTANT b’f
Telephone 01-578 4393.
Cold Storage Board of Zambia
Vacancies
ACCOUNTANTS (3)
Vacancies exfat for accountant*
in tin* Board. Applicants most
have had sever*) yean experieace
■n a senior accounting capacity in
private practice, commerce.
The muxessfnl epoUcmta will be
responsible tn the Chief Accnum-
am tor the day to day control of
its accounting duties and most be
able to maintain tta books up to
iinal accounts level.
Appointment would he on a
three year Contract for non
Zambian wit* a terminal gratuity
■If lin In nca- tAh.1 aiLare.
A young man recently quali-
fied or an older man with
practical experience to re-
quired to accept responsi-
bility lor tha daiMo-duy
costing, sbitfatics and slock
records systems.
Salary negotiable £2.-50 pa
Please telephone or write for
application tonn
Pcreonnel Manager ISMP),
RONALD IRIST
CONTROLS LIMITED,
Bath Ro«>l ,
Slough SL1 4DN.
Tot. Slongh 34646.
ASSISTANT SALES
MANAGER
COST CLERK
of up to 25% ot the total salary.
Other terms and conditions In-
clude: —
lor tnuwport of effect
mem nod on oomni
Comract. Born with
Hire ft provided at ■ Sub-econo-
mic rent. Medical aid. Cor Loan
Commenting wriary would dts
qual/flcMfcxm.
_ Apphcjiitmi* oontohrtng full dr-
required to work for a.
progrewlve Wsst London
Company In M*>
^^d fo£a*
pmdUve roptrlbutlon tn the
accnupting fnnction bf »a
Company. The euroes*tuj
applicant will b- rosoonwhlr
to the Cost Accountant and
Mb remuneration wilt, re-
flect his previous expenioce.
Doties are to. a ssist the
Safes Manager to control a
Seles Force made up both
□f Representatives and
Agents of bfqb calibre.
Travel will be neeewary
throughout the U.K. vtoiung
regional showrooms and cus-
tomers.
An ability to conduct top
level negotiation Is essen-
Tbe control hmetton In tbb
position reqpkea a grasp of
figures and the reactiuo ol
computer information.
AooUrants wits. ralevant ex-
perience should aeod full
perienee should send
details to:
Personnel Manager,
Poaotds Ltd.,
Station Road.
tad* or quailflcaijoDS. previous ex.
pretence, marital status and avail-
ability. should be addressed to:—
_ The General Manager, .
The General Manager,
CoM Storage Board of Zambia.
P.O. Box 1915.
Lusaka /amtb.
Normal company benefits
covering holidays, richness
and pension oo with . this
appointment.
CHIEF MARKETING
EXECUTIVE
An international Droop of
companies engaged m tbo
FINANCIAL CONTROLLER
Qualified Accountant re-
quired to act aa Company
Secretary Financial Control-
ler and Office Manager tot a
fended Estate and lbs asso-
ciated group at production
and service companies nod
uryanisdtiDDS. oil sitnated In
Cumberland. Appointment to
ivmmtocr on 1st January,
1972. This to a new post
in on expanding concern so
that participation if required
and salary ore negotiatble.
Very attractive Estate Houoe
avail able.
Apply: Chief Agent. Eort
of Lonsdale’s Estates.
Lowthor, Penrith, Cumber-
land.
companies engaged m the
manufacture of printing
machinery hrrltns atml [ca-
tions from experienced mar-
ket orientated executives
nrcrerablv wfith a background
of graphics,
Successful applicant wlli
be based in Bahamas and
will be responsible for all
ororect* of markeefna and
sales In worldwide opera-
tions now be Son planned.
Please submit fuH per-
sonal resume to C M. 15662.
Daily Telegraph. E.C.4,
DEPARTMENTAL
MANAGER
ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTANT
CHR^ 5LER INTERNA-
TIONAL 5. A. to looking
(or .i qualified or partly
qua 1 1 fil'd Accountant with
sound experience In genornl
ncrountlnO' Excellent condi-
tions nl employment. Please
applv ntvinu drinito ol your
qu.itiBi'utlnns. r.m.-er to data
and present salary to:
XI lw hue Mule.
„ l 1 ' rsonn'-I OIHcit.
CHRYSLER INTERNATIONAL
fbiwnl.T Hiram,
Kniglilsbrl'lue.
London S.W.t.
ASPIRING
ACCOUNTANTS
lVr will ohnrtjy require
n t,inini iiirniim.int. t»Trt-r-
nbto un,-il hciw, ,.n 22/76. lo
h-si-i rhr ncrount.int of our
U.K. , 1.1 l>q n pa ration based
.if Miiidrnhp.nl.
He '-huuld huvr obtained
fnrmal qua llnr.it Iota an.
pr-i." hmij pror,«»(onal ln-
tpriuprtinir M„ndard and
nn-si-ss i.xpprtenri' .it general
? ,Kl . .'-‘Ire jeriiunting. pre-
fer. ilili aqnlred on manual/
compiih'rlsi'J systems.
vy.irklnn to it trlct time-
hi' rr-pon.mimmi
wi.i inrlude infer-ciimpany
.>•>., 111 , 1 , rcLi.ni III it.i.n.
nn.ily-is nf r.ipii ii neenunts.
and providing guidance an
tin- daily ariivitirs of tho
piirchrfse and sales ledger.
Mi./ p.isiitnn off. rs the nn.
C Tfiirnly in rtnln RxpL-rlenra
i a variety nl nrrnunt.int
L! r 'i on ... c TV r 7 oncauragp.
Ijwnl will be given for
Largo and expanding ship-
ping company requires an
experienced and highly effi-
cient man la bead its pur-
chasing department. ■ He
will have cooriderable re-
sponsibility and report .
direct to the board. Vary
attractive terms will be
offered to the right parson.
Vtnta D-M. 15712, DaOr
Telograpb. E.C.4.
ENGINEERING ADMIN.
Manager for PeCro-Gbem. Co.,
to run Docn mentation Dept,,
resp. for 20 staff, tech, authors,
etc. Age 28-35 approx. SaL
£2.500 net). — MALLA. 554 . Eus-
JJjbyRd', N.WT.l. 01-388 OBI aT
EXPORT MANAGER
(DESIGNATE)
ACCOUNT
leading pro
« the City
Nationally known maoufic-
lurers ol Cor and Motor-
cycle Accessories an d
Plustlc Maul thugs Cot the
Hsidware and Phymbing
Tribes offer tuts rrosIMan
with excellent career pros-
pens. The Export Depart-
ment of Uhns expanding nrl-
™>r cnnroaqy has an out-
s' ending growth record over
n?’"L, Wtlnlri] for^Ornf^StaM
nraettra. Circa £5.300 0 ?a
5!fc A” r 4j, c 5 e y25r
SECRETARY/
CHIEF ACCOUNTANT
Applicants vtionld be ener-
gtflc and reliable, have ex-
port sales experience, speak
and writ.* at least one for-
eign lantHiaqa add be con-
vi-rsant wlur documentation
and sb toping Dfocedureo.
Apply to:
Export Direr rot.
Stadium Ltd..
50-36 Qaeniwway.
Enfield. Middx.
{“rih'T ■■ro.ly. Farther de.
’•’•I" tc lentil. nr or write to
11 1!- T , t-hiipman . Memo rax
FOLIO 5°Gt ETY K a rig.
! h^iJ . P 2' ,J| emnpuny wita
nuii for pubTMting
dln-rr* V Y. h,rh O™ W»ld On
J„. nd Exw'rt-Tliey are look-
UJ? aecQuntnm ta
“*■ re^pnitoiM. 1 for thr. Snrlotrv
It. K. Ltd.. Berkshire House.
O-irett btni.1, Mfilrtenhc.id.
Tel. Maidenhead
A T7, 1 * ' < T r ! vfc . nnpnrtuniti«« snarierly^a’n.i™
'"'■•red In the Victoria araa bv I T i* e P n »t carries
r.iniiuny rnnmM ' I ill nervonnl r.-,™.
respimciM.. f Qr 5 UC loty\
accnunrinq stork; and member-
.«■’ will also hn rr.
GENERAL MANAGER
?K a e rl i r n lv t 22^i n "Tfi"? uaL "- SST5SI, i
Huml lExpcnuiture) In Itio pandlns Edll.iri.il nno.irfinenr
Finaacn Dep.irUnvnt uf this ,V»- Involved In Inird backs, n.ipcr-
suciuilun. The salary is 111 n.icks and inan.irines. f sp.'ri-
■ccur dance with the Senior
Officer. Grade i£21 Uu-L'JTb 1 1
plus £144 Lnndun W.W<ihlin>t.
The ddllev «M rfito past include Library. Rarit.irds Inn,
Uic supn-vw™ ot tile l_xpvn- E.V..S. or ring AOS / 4614,
dilute Secliou u) the Finance
KrlS B r n 2 l,r - h, 5>' i hP n,v ' ,n In "ynunn "raaif %rtidy! ■‘'•P'.-ris or «a
tvSte'in 1 ! emhuM.isin. ^ jm lr*r prnn-.s|i. n ,ri ntmlfflcJ. work.
kV^Hshl ^.“" ntc n ■‘‘"'"'i- *2) Cal,-, Ledoer C|"?S „ F«*1I del alto
,“i br J ^y, ■gPMMLg Inn. Iili.mf IJ.dSn p.n. male ar te- ^irerinr. The
E.C.i. or ring 40S/4614. fSl Shinning Clerk m.i® P 5trattnrd P
“““t •» *Mb to
a ? d *Wc3«tB.
(bl CONVEYANCING
ASSISTANTS (2)
(AP.d.-S £1 .776- £2. 268 p.a.)
since leaving Lolteoe. t'dwry
tuiider xetfew) w.tbm
KINGSTON POLYTECHNIC
Aoolirjtions are invited for the
about nests.
rang" £B25-£9EKJ according
“iCP-Sfe
“Swart. =0)^9^
sssffecjr«-ss
csiinfl forms may ot
'Obtain
TTu. Corporation have iwnrtv
nf lhc centre ot the C.iv Involving
fltidiS ^ ^ i0clal % Si mated ! mwslinen: n nf public
Candid ales riiottid haw adminto- , h^'iirh f ntatoe® S!h"mlli
n^dMrtro^np^emSv^Pl . ^ «?«Ufi of thfl UM
SHtlRTIIAVD TYPISTS. AUDIO
TYP1 C T5 required hv thn Lon-
dtm Borotmh ol Nrwhnm lo
work In offlem nl Enri Ham
or Stratford. Fnlnrv tip to
£ 1.221 p»r annum aceonlino
to ane. qu.dificatlniM prnQci-
wm and cSjhTirnre. Content
fnrtlltipo and nrnernitq hnliil.iv
enlUtnnent. Telrphnne the re-
crnltoimt nnd Training Offi-
cer. 472 1430 Evt. 301 or
wmr tii the Town Clerk. Town
Hall. East Hum. E6 "HP.
G. E. SMITH. Town Clerk.
Department, responsible iur | wa.n reo T^ TinVi — :
salunc*. w.njrs. super-iniiiinilnn I »i *iT. ii.!!." l . , . , 7. a LJ'? w ri ,0 V™*
and allied outlup. toiiclbcr
With Ute p.i>nnnt ui ail t.u.ois
a-iain^l the As' ,, ci.ition and
lu, anrlilaries. Kniiwleaue <■' _ —
all a^pccls nf nun.-i.inini.it lun
will be an .idvani.njn. Appll- _ ,
sums sn.iut.1 have gi«nl .idniin ( s. 2 . IlAlHERS (M.tIl*)
trntiva ability and ah*, possir-i
a r rioiin toed .iCL.iiiiiLnii-y qu.ili- w.mtrd fnr l.in^ua.ir scliniii In
Ociitlan. Cnn'litioib ol sr-rvice Ruhr district iGenn-inv>! (i n ,. ,o
similar to Loc.il G.iveruiiiedl. knew businc*, mi r.-,nuiii|.-nra
bupi'ninnunhuii inivnh mpe un>l Germnu r.-/.i a ntinl. Gnod
inSsss ?* p,jco - w - ,: T.&
WAiiN TKD. .inlinal n.vpr tn work ciflr * 4 ’ T *W>* audio, h round Inq renalr
&3S3WTS6
n ipnir.i-nn .... _ w,, h rapidly rToandino c,- SL.. shova or ailied trades
BERMUDA
irtvi iMJT * rrn
nn Wiu iDnrjintm« nr of
upplir*. Adtlsloocc wllh rruioV<4 *«^mVa Civu I uil Ui-i.iiis. vi'r'm*
fXDTDwv. Sl.iJI ruhiam.inl. „
la^^^ 3 r£ B | l SlS.£I776 SS™5 ^YO^S S^ARvl'X
+ £90 London aUoieuqce. HOB- plications an? Iirvitcd from
«ta , ro B d PP h?“ao Applicants for oori fai muri SSL!!*!!!
w have Wide eoiweynarim evrvrl-
OF
csndldntrg over 21 vron; or
either sex fur this very inter-
esting appointment Ln the hto-
Mine City of York. The -alary
range is at present £l.j!72 to
MR .ALFRhD URiiSS.
CIO Klt.mvnOD HOTEL.
25, t-K XNLIZY GARDENS.
. .LONDON. b.W.i.
for luicrvicw on 3lith JULY.
1971,
a sub Section.
107 ““tor' 1 * e * 1 * 1 tro “ Sente mbar
PART-TIME LECTURERS
3
« JS^Sf 1 r «iS*BS! to, » tro® the
Candidate* for posts fb) jdiouid
be egncrivitced conveyancers able
ro work with Ultie suporvisipn.
£( .464 (Clrrtcal Grade Si Full
nar'teulsr*. nnd application Inrm
from the Town Clrrk. Guild-
hall. York. iTrlepbone Nn.
Yurk 593SM.
Applications must reach the
General Secret.ity. NALGU
iloiuiL-. 8 H'lrcwmal Row. Lun-
don. NWi bSQ by Monday.
2nd August 1971.
PH OGRESS CHASER required
lor our busy centra] purchnae
drpartment. ive need a yuunn
man with ambition, driva and
iDiiintivc. nl) of winch wc re-
Hard a* impartnnt to the
success of tbc whole depart- ,
I A BETTER S \l ARY + excellent
iiroip« * Ihruugb the Landua
BOOK-KEEPER
ACCOUNTANCY
ComnHDdno
•cam according to qnallficjliuns
ud experience. _ Assistance given
tow onto removal wpepn-s uni
temporary bcmrina orovided in
approved oases.
udrhte RAfilLISOS UT>C. EsTABUSH-
MENT ASSISTANT «l»h
otuiuriunifv of dealing with
our suppliers nnd vanuu,
tiimp.ini>^ viii hie tha nraup
nnd will provide a sound M.irt
EvatuatlPDi. £2.023-£2.75)
pa.. A DCWIJ Ptf.lt afl uosl
ALiiiu.il.mrv Biir.. QB Fnirln-i-
nnd will provide a sound si.irt | 34a| S, 7Ib3. "cilPta
tu a cori-cr in nnrchaaino. The a COMPANY ut m \nV'.L
posiUuit mhjht wilt tin nnibt- j MtNf CONRULl'ANiq 1 ? ex-
Appllcatwtu form ofitidnatitp
mm the Lsrabftohment Officer.
City Han. Cardin, mint be re-
turned by. 20 Almost. 1971.
arising from Council's nuwni
dee.ripn to undertfilce a Jnh
rvaigation scltvm.* Previi.ii.
experience ol Ibis teriiqtqoe
dr«irablr. . Porirard for lurttr-r
dcraiis oad appileariaq rr.iqi ia
posiiluit ntfijhi Milt uo anibt-
linus schupt leaver. A r tract l w*
ruil.iry uttered to (bo ncht
apUilCDDl plus L.Vj. If you
feej ynn are ablfl to accept
respnibiijJiiiy nnd have been
Town MiMS'T lEsl.J. Council
OfflfiJ. Foflnarwick. Basildon,
retunublc by 9 August.
dard. Dlcava Mrile. ulvlng rull
details. to M. J. C.intli*.
Guiirrev PfilHliM Ltd., Kt-12.
tSftMcD. R “ 1Ul * L0Bd “‘
intlliiB lt» I'rolL-ssiMn.ii liml-rer
V , iuxe*‘"U qi,t l Hni .‘ d ACCOUN T-
ANTb. Wc shutild now like lo
hear trout LbarUirod Atcount-
aitia who are inicri&tfd In
uversna* uppntntmrnls. Apply
quuliiig ref. ST IP the Mnnan-
luo Direr h.r. ManPlun Market.
Z ■ ^SB,"TKT m
E"5fen- JTr «5vrw(ffi
T 11 ^ requln-d “A
*un*rvi .■ n)i tan.^qi 0 f ,h r
?rn r I , rim l Li n WT, “ 11 BTOrWmle
h,r.. T “*• ho trial
p.ii in-* Nfari r.
Anmirnnis should bo nrefer.
ably sinnle. am d 23 150 »vh
ol ^ n?^.r 1 h “ T, backqiSMiod
• wrlt-iu:.. m honk-k'-p-
ing .sort .ir-niirris. Tvrn.veu.
. r M,,n '
E'S'nJ 01 '’ 1 nad a «Hirv
^ h " nfsujtl.ihie
“lire ' ,n l " , ‘' Jn ’ 1
AppUrqilonv 10 :
wuh rapidly rtpandfaig Com. Ur, s K 0 !! HL.SSi? 11 ^Hea
««»• Aimlicotidig ro p«>2IJ:
S^, Manager. National Car car ^ £a,BM 00 D - a - Phig
iLotd ,Ps Brill 7'5 Reply In wntdng u> Affver
“^Sari^Stbftff . nni mSwTe. C.*. - *' a07aa "
y.iunii purnlers. In rapidly'"’ « l crwft*Jrnrn mu-lT** 1 - t , r *« l ed ip
Vi.ibd ^m"’ ' a ' H £R l $gP \ advwuser '
Daily Telegraph. £C c 656,
r *SSS
•ororor or a.C.A 30 45
IS , .<loo.M n . , sao.
N MANAGER EHJECnON MOULDING We
^ n> Bt y h , ^ Clpjnd^g,
SSWSkJF* ?nd Han one VD \%g£
TV C rs n K-' Jpurma e protTiuting
c bSd ,da ^*SS
3?®£a#^ , i- , 8ttSc
R- J. W 1 W 1
'nnqliM DIrec*ort.
MERY 1 N HUGHES AND
COMPANY LIMITED. U
... _ . . fAcojuntnncy EnpinrincDl
r!I2 '‘it- ManPlon Markn. | ConsuHnntsi
Cntvsult inis Limited. 57- 1 3-7 Htn^-sf.-i Row. Lnndun. E.C.2.
Alijisn Str.mi. Rugby. Warwick*' Tfllepftppe Ql-fiM 4701-
J
ibiro- Rugby 740ub.
6DA5.
WYTKENSHAWE A vnovu
CH ESH PR EH I MC, , ACCOUNT-
m s-iuJi 5 ®] 5 ! ^, IV T required
?£t ii VinjinLstrBtlm. a-nde
cn.iiro^^’iZ 67 P-a-J W lake
linn a [ , ho expenditure ire-
I*"". ..Ao^R'-tita fhrtuld have
f 'Perienee and tie
Jtti'ivinq tor r relevant otn.
^ WB tl Tual'dcailon — Apntl-
cbi inn forms nnd Job fescrla.
rion from Groan Secretary,
r-ntral Offic-s. FJonh Rond
■ft'MKffie’ST M33 ?ro„posifl B
13th Auguyt, 1971.
WE5T END Ann of ClUrtr-red
AccniintuntB rs parrnrrsl rrnulrr
Bom I -senior or Inst quallfird
■toff fnr Uteir wtpnndfbn iSS
Wee. Phone 0I-S5b 3572.^*^
1 “*4 be sutficiont to ■#.
hem , nii? a .!S ,,1 L2I afl . ond . trtnoe
b^C-'ed ig a large. Urogrosivn
company. Write 'n tho Brat
inriaucc giving full details nr
tffi-kniMraa ana cxperlcnco to
the pLraono,,;; Manoncr. Brltfafa
torpornucm (Gmpott)
“"it™. Furcbnni Rond Gifc-
purti Hants.
Con tinned ML ITezt Page
H.V
c . .
Ill .
til..
1 b
L S '. j “ ,<-■
-'■oa.o £
&KiD(
tu\(
.'-fta.i.n.
•si. '••ft; I
fcil’ 1 nt‘
’*» U.s.
S“-b,S?
r'--« • »■
a
4fin
V. T * ,
SITUATIONS VACANT
Continued from Preceding Page
MANAGEMENT
AND EXECUTIVE
SALES ENGINEER
Hie oi German capital
□£& bl W U, u , W L VACAN-
.9' 1, flolnfl Mecb..
Admin. MALLA Any..
Ehdb Hoad. London.
5BB OBI B t24-hL>ur
CONDITIONING Ennlnenr
•££ oinirncta manager. tjood
“* 5 fV sod opportunity (a?
UHneBCed ud pruyiwuvt
enumror. Write u eooSuVnce.
ataunu quBlincBiiuiu. viper).
tel** 80 *' u * Uy leleareau.
Quelined cnyfiievra
wlilj bochJ uid iiiuords.
uralrnbiu qualification^ - hi-
pcncnce whb N.C.B.: Drlll-
u ii expcriuirce. capucitilly by
reverse cueulaliun. Lood
OernirtD.
Willi ,un detail*
1 ?L lurterr imurmution 10
S.E.4V4U, Dally lclsyrepll.
SALES PROMOTION
OFFICER-
Jgodoti owed xaes promotion
by national
hm promotion
? Essential qualities
tociudinp proven record ut
M-ixeas m Msotialino and imple-
menting sales promotions, qood
oraunleuuooul and admmtolralive
ability, wide knowledge oi. and
comae* in. tbe grocery rerail in-
dustry. Age ^ 26i56. Salary
around £2.DUf) + cur. elc.
Apply in writing to Personnel
Director, A] bed Marketing Ser-
vices Ltd.. T Beta i on Fines.
London. S.VV.l.W OJL.
TRAINEE IN
PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT
A brat close career oppor-
tunity la offered to a young
nan (aged about 18 vrorsj
lg Personnel Management.
Initially be would be em-
Jjkiyed In - work involving
personnel reeunh. statistics
and wanes administration.
7 be successful applicant
muM have pawed at least 2
•A' levels, be ot gaud ap-
pearance and personality and
be interested in people in
a work situation. Attention
to detail is an essential re-
quisite m tbe lob as well
as a determined will to suc-
ceed in this cn risen career.
Applicants should first write
giving age. brief details of
education end 'it acyl ex-
perience as well as selling
Out tul] reasons why be
wishes to make a career la
Personnel Management to
tbe Personnel Manager. Tbe
Metal Box Company Limited.
Crawl ck Road. Homerton.
London. E.9.
CAPACITOR SALES
ENGINEER
k. Hum (Cdpdciiorsi
tjfji ■ '.euulro to appoint a
woacnor »Jln. tnviunr. He
P?JlL 0 , re . 1 f r ‘ ,ul > be bused .jo
A ddin* ton. out an cu-
oi fcsilfilii id Ule Noitb
aide ° ‘"“‘H* at obtvi-
i.-/' D0 !!E n,,, “ 'hould Ire ranii-
ilfi wl| h me uac of capacl-
lorvi tor Industrial puriKwca.
kill' ronimutdtiua. minus
niienng. motor run and
BuuructDi ann aiacbarue
fcbMnr uJf Would bu nut-es-
■ury tor tbe up pointed himid
"..“r ubl“ >u duiiu imelU
ueiiUy nrooieiu, w,Lb rutua-
mJ ■live rucouimenod-
hon, A ur 545 40. Abe »u>i-
Uuii wuuld L4i ry a -alary
coiiiiueiwurdte wiib rrapoasi-
ink experience Cum-
pan» car proviaeu — uuaMtia
■““Mile in Optra lion. uua=,u “
r*ledne send UitLaila of
OUniihi uuoiit. and c-jjurlenco.
— u Maoatun'i Director
Q- H. Hunt (t^iuaLiIor,! lm,
Valuta Way. New Adding tan.
Croyuon uiy obh.
CIVIL/ PIPING/
iNSIRUMENT
ENGINEERS AND
DESIGNER*
|or Holland and German,
Bt-* jj 43 me Hauue.
ul. Uttaclilull llbidUta.
CIVIL ENGINEERS AND
_ draughtsmen
ICroydoo Design UUiceJ
Tiucoll Cementation hewm-
evriiur Llinlltd provides a
biBhiy diversined engineer Inn
dc-a-iu scrvl>.e and lurilier
vdcdntles exist lur engineers
auu drauviiLMUL-o with about
r * Vears' U.k. experieoce
There are interesting, per-
manent appoliiimcnti. invulv-
my civil. rpcaalrsf and
marine prospects at ncunii
and cvern-as ■..ounncnoati
Mt-irira are competitive and
maJ.ji Luxiidit) trlnu«
beiieutx enuly.
ipfurmal mtirvlews will Ue
held -hurt Is ,T si rid confi-
dents
fit use write to: Divisional
Peru i mi el Manuper.
trocolt Cciutnuiion
btuuui cring Llmrl-d.
OKI . Mitcnam Htuil.
Lruydon (.KB 5AP.
A MLMUtR OF I'Hh
TRAP A LG AH HOUSE f.UODP
ENGINEERS
AND DRAUGHTSMEN
A BACKGROUND
CIVIL, S1RUC1 URAL. bLLC-
TKiC.LL. LLELTKONIC. Ptl'HO
CULSIlCAL. MtLHANICAL. H.
« V.. D.P. LNGINLLKS A-\D
UR-A UGH1 S MLN
CALX NOW.
BO. Uov L -r bt., Picc-idiily i W.l.
4B3 1381: 1U9 rouanbam Court
Road. W.i. 387 840a. 1 Pbtipal
Lane. L.C.6- lei. bl'3 4dbS.
ELMOS bTAi-P
APPUiNTMLNlS.
LAGOS. NIGERIA
cavil Engineer wanted with
knowledge ol quantity sorvovlnq
— aged 25-40 with minimum 5
yrars fielo experience. Free air
pauage. 18 months lour* with 8
wrrka hnin* trave on lnl| pay.
Free hirulxbud Bcrcanmodatlop
and car. Good (alary ID be
neggnated. Apply Donald A.
Kershaw & Co.. Solicitors. 30
Hans Road Knlnbtabridge. Lon-
don. S.W.3.
A SUPERVISING
MAiN i t.\A.\ op
ENGINEER
required lui Middle East
Oil Company desert lou-
tiou. (Juag-bLdlluns : Appiuo-
ticii.tip plus three iears J
industrial mainls nan tp Ul
Uc.tl goslslriini turbines
«... diesets itsro in uumer
pjjnLs. locomotives or
■uariou euuiuo. company
piovides atr conditioned
single or fdiuily atcuminoda-
tiua. with amrmiita. oi .lull,
leun a, swimming. cinema
nc. Job can be permanen-.
Conmbution to boarding
muyi c&sli fur children and
relocBQon expenses pd.d.
with 55 days icave and U.l.
fares itmuaily. balari Start
approx. £230 p.ra. tVrile!
F.A1.C. Management ber-
nccs. 160 High St/eaL
Bunoa-M-TiHt. st*n*«
PLANT
TRANSPORT MANAGER
reuuirro m Civil Login-
flpr.uq Lumoauy baaed near
Km nuat" Apnliram must
be Cjpabir at toi.lruliinq
lran-unri and plant. but
fuTx ■ cinvrrfdnt with the
Adiuiuulrrtive side or :m«
position, on which tba r.-.n
rinnnasis is olaeed.
biliary. peoaton acbema.
company car. Tel: Roctt-
dalt 41562.
THE POLYTECHNIC OP
Central London
At> pi it a ikius ora invited for
tbe post ul
RESIDENT ENGINEER
to supervise the Installation
ol mechanical nod electrical
service, lb the rebuilding of
Ihc Loitlt lncbfitfid Street
cxletMum lor rhr Depsruni nt
or Photogrupdy and Com-
raunicwttioa.-. I be post wHI oe
avBthsble for aopolnimeot
iniirted lately and will bo ryj
a minimum .period oi ai
moaUu. A salary of £2.500
p.u- is offered wiUi tbt nos
BibiHCy ol negoUMinu a
biyber figure for an appli-
cant Of ability with supervis-
ing experience on large heal-
ing. venfil-Ulna nod electrical
InaMlkrtiom. >**«?« contact
Zismaa Buwjvr A Partner*. I
Lion !»?««. KJchmoDd.
Surrey, ftd. 940 8161.
BRIDGE DESIGN
tNGLNEEfii*
Consulting CWlEnnWw*
hr vacancies '? r .
<ed kinic'.arAl blccl Bndaa
^pJrswl.b wodumyvr.
, jnrrta and carporaio
mbirylLO ol Froiei*ional
■-riS U °“ork win Ib'olvo
,*qo of major suspension
dgtfj nod omer important
t interest lao jirucicrM at
me and ovenca with tan
.aiblLio «« servicn abroad
xtcired .
Good salaries and orp|-
■t« 5 das week. L.VJ.
e Assaraoce spd Peoaion
Jvnte" BMW tpU parli-
7-V of ape. qis&Ufi ratio ns.
,Vnen « and salary re-
Stf" apbliralloM will be
*” strict conJn>*BC*.
The Staff OBcer.
si iv FOX * PARTNERS
25: Vieiorta Slip.
London. S.W-1.
capable of bandltag large in
dustriaj projects frum site In
vesMgatian to rom missioning
SOUTH EASTERN ROAD
CaWffTRUCTl ON UNIT
SURREY COUNTY SUB-UNIT
SENIOR TECHNICAL
ASSISTANT {TRAFFIC)
L3.023-C2.ZbB
Tbe Sub-Unit Is located In
Sc&e re of«coe M Guildford
The nersou appniiMcd will he
primarily inq.iard on . '” p
thr IronsoorluLpn
rkm io n* cnrrled oul on a
a major kriqWi of ibc Nurih
Orb.lal Motnrwav iM.a'.
but duties will n'«n mi Jude
many aspects of waffle enqin
erring niooctal'd wdh m' ■ or-
wm comfrndion an/ nprra-
tlon Appiicail- nui-f nuve
experience of orqanit'Ob
purary staff and knoixH/iar
of computer Input hondlinq in
connection with simulated
traffic models. Generous re-
locatfon expenses and awts-
taoce with bouse purch.w , __ m
approved cases. Car mileage
(llowum.
APPffretlon form iqaofe r*w*
rrn. 97i From County Engin-
eer. County HaH. KIno«nn
upon Thames. Closing data
SU August.
SERVICE ENGINEER
Truck-Fleet Maintenance
A majur loctory in London
N.VV.ID uaea a Ueu ot Com-
pany products which u owns
or mu under long term
rcplM. We require a service
tngiurrr to be lucmad wiinin
‘hat Luinuaqy and to be
rmuonalnie iur tbe maintn-
iuikx ol tbe Hen.
nt e S?F d,a * ,r- ‘hould qe Bflcd
“O-en. p. a clean
duvi.rq liciutr and live in
oi U(di N.VV.10. Applicant*
-bull Id hL-j luvc vervml an
ebtlrical i-iiMiueeriau apurcu-
iKtship. Iiuve a knnwiedae
ul d.c. aysii-id* and proicr-
W.‘i) hate had tiprrtinci ol
mitlifeutlal. dyilraullc or
rKi uunic mulpoKUI.
Th.-ruuuh tnunlug on tbe
pruduct will be provided.
Fleaae wnlr iilvng brief
details ur expend tee. qualf-
ilcmi-ne and saluiy to:
P. W. Steele IBLIUTI.
Manaucr— Odlurii-d I'erwinnel
A Ttulnluq.
LANbING UAGNAI.L LIMITED.
Kjuysckrc Kuad.
UdtinUkiuke. IldilLa.
lciepbuai Bdaiihteluke 5131.
extension 211
THE NESTLE
CUMEANV LJD.
'require an AoaiblAKl TECH-
NIL AL BUW.K lor their tooiu-
cei niii UL'{uriiii'.ni.
fbe duuliLpiit uitbt bava pre-
vious uuun—iiiij expei lence tn
lliL ca<imei'riii>i industry, and Ik
C dpaulc ul iiuiidlujg a luruc
□ unibi-r ol uu'iumes. Frevtouu cx>
ch 1 1 -, aie or Mis* pun-buntaa ul
piut'-xi aipcliiinrv and spare*
wuuld be au uutudlaue. and Lite
dli- lily to r-.ud k-i-iicb. Licrmau ur
bpanieb wuuld l>e a valuable
av>el.
Hli^ise cum Hit Mr* J. M.
Fuwle. Fersuiiiiet LiLpartmenl.
1U-: Nestle Lumpnny L.ld.. SI
ij.enn.-S Hoes'. croydoa.
buirey. »JHU INII. Tul-: 01-
0 HU 3535. t s». 2733 124 Ur- .
aujwcriuu -s‘ltltt' 1 .
SCIENTISTS
AND TtCHHOLUGISTS
SHIRLEY INSTITUTE
ABSTRACTOR
An AU-li it lur u> required
by ihc bbruiy and inluruix-
liun 1 1 - : i— n 1 1 uicut HI tin:
bhlltLL\ (iNSl'ITUl'E M»
uu.j nit -it jii cxiviliiu learn
vulittilu-li hi h Hit produc-
tion ul " -V ul Id l ex 1 ilu
AU-truclx." .Hid the devniup-
uitiil ul unliMUliii — baaed
liiiurniatiuii M-rvum.
LuudJduL.- an mi id ha
set*, uti iii.iui-uIes id tbatr
IW., line* ikuuwlediie ul IX*-
■ it- wit IK.- and icconulrqiy
aiiJ 'ii ul tile Lu.rui.tii laililfl-
auf u> dcai i able bul apt
<u>futi 0 l>. lilt) uniat im
auit lu write in u deal bund
and iu jjulhI Lugliah aud to
sunmiiiria.. Luntiaelv aciauli-
ht. and loliuitai aructea,
B niJL-runiiudtiuii Scheme fur
u iv cl attic*. Wurkiug condi-
Uuiia arc exLt-Ueal.
Pl'-ase luuke handwritten
auulit.ilioof tu lb: Fer»unnel
betltuu.
SHLKLES INVIWUTE.
UuLbbiii k.
MdiiLlluut MjU UKX.
ANALYTICAL
ItLHNlCiAN
Interaaliuaal company tnand-
fe tlu^m■| urealutl* uutl cUrm-
•l* require a mala or
tem.it trtanician In the 20-
25 yearo age gruup lur iheir
■uuuL-ru anulytical depart-
ment Hi Huudj-Iuw. M ta>«-
aex.
AuPlicanu vbould posniaa or
be Mudying lor the H.N.C.
tn chtuiralry aflU be prub-
Cirul iu uunti.il analytical
tecbniqueia mtluding G L.C..
T.L.C.. I.R. and U V.f
Visitor speLlrOpnuluiurtry.
Copdliiune oi employ meat
are 6r»t Uaio and an attrac-
tive commencing salary ib
eovluagad with progr«»nva
I eVifelUD*.
leaur apply. ID hITTOI con-
t MDU. to: —
be FtnucDcl Manager.
WILLIAMS ■ UOUNsLOWJ
Li Mil LI).
Greville Udiuc. Hibernia
Raid.
UduhIow. Middlesex.
L£it CONSERVANCY
CA1CUMEN 1 BOARD
CHEMIST/ HEAD OF
LABORATORY
Appllcalion* are invited for
the above post tram wail
q nabbed cbeBU.l* pru/crahlf
with wide upenrnw in
water pollution cunlfOI.
'1 be person appointed will
be rc.puoalble lur ibe or-
uamsatiun aud aupervu.iun
ul an unalyiical work car-
ried uui id a modern. *vH.'-
rqu.pped libs a'ur). He
w li a»sui in iPe selmimc
unci nun ui ibe Urparl-
nitnlV work mcludlng Oe-
vctuput'Ote m tuoneCliun
with cirtlltnuuua wular
quality mumluriag.
The Balmy will be wnnia
Pfipctpal u dicer* Range
li2i £2.751 iu £3.150. plu*
Luadua vtL-.gnum. £105
per annum.
Further deia Is and «d ap-
plication lurm cun be i-b-
iBia.d trom Ule undersigned.
C. using daie tul ap^ucatua*
u, a.n Auguri. 1971.
I nc FioIlc. mn ot
Water Gfiieer.
Lee Cun., rvfedcy
Calchm.bi Board.
The G.ange.
Crosubruuk wrteL
Waimam Ciun, Hen*.
CHIE F FLAVOUR
CHEMIST
Are you u Nu. 2 looking
far a Nu. ] DtrsiUonT
We are yeekma a good
develupnicnt Flavuiir Chemi&t
capab.e oi seltinn no and
running department for
to. l i national LamDBDf.
Salary and terms b*
nenotiauon.
Arnly . .
Manxqrna uirrctor.
Friuache Dodge A Olcott
lU.K.i Lid..
Ftnedop Hu.m Industrial batata.
Links Rudd
We.iiDBUui i.iiah .
Northauis.
Tel.: WcliUinburuuub 6821.
UNIVERSITY OF SURREY
Jtl' AW I MLNT OF MUSIC
SENIOR TECHNICLAN
fur K .-curriiug Sipdio and
Mobile Kecurdinit*
A v.icanry MUM lor a
Senior li-cnniciun ?■ set np
Bud rn.nnia.il prolestfional
ri ror.ling eqiuptiienl :n me
Ml MIC i)i-pariiuenl> sound
s iiiiin. I he siillcmIuI ea >-
S . Ill' will lake nart In
>isuin «|i-rulion« and wH*
0 - niij».-in' .the lor ihc m i:-i
tpojd c ul .ludlo and uca-
dun cquipmenl. Hi- will ha
wrking ill cullaticu ai ion
wi n UU; Srniur t-. iu er in
H 1 carding Technique* on
ibe laumeisier Course, and
should have -ecurding In-
dustry experience in the
fuilowma: —
installs' ion. testing and
maintenance of orpireatjuai
recording equipm flt;
operaHodar techniques as-
sociated with music rceord-
tdg. dubbing and euu ng.
The wlaT «»!« * 81.3B8*
£1.707 per annum.
Emlk-ni huhday arrange-
mcnis and Superanaua tun
achrnie Appl.ca'IOQ lonm*
can be obtained iru_n the
SUP Ofifer. UoiwrA'Cr -i
Surrei. Guildlord. bdrrey.
‘should b« "mjlB-rt
and returned by me ■ Be»-
ttmacr 1971.
\U
REPRESENTATIVES
PINNACLE ELECTRONICS LTD.
Our IM expanding National
direct in dealer marketing pro-
gramme, nrccssiiiilot the apwalnt-
ment Of n Brat du)
REPRESENTATIVE
In London and tba Home Coun-
ties. Applicants must already be
cuiUnn un record retail outlet*
Including Hi-Fi shops, depart-
ment •tores and mulUplea.
This position will be at Interest
lo a wall organised entbusiaMic
reprcaenixrfye and win aflord a
■la rung salary. mdiidJno cummin-
•ton of £2.500 with ample oppor-
tune to incrroae earning, rapidly.
_ SALES
- REPRESENTATIVES ‘
Circa £3.000 + car.
A major U.K. IndaatriaJ
concern bon vacancies for
reprcMocativc* tn H amp i hire
and hurray
Tbe Job In la look far and
nrouunfc new buainem. new
application* add service exist-
ing customer* who are mainly
In engineering nr UstU in-
dustry.
To do thh, we need men
who are proven mr i r otfuJ
KHeMM or bawl tbe peraon-
*11 ty to MIL They aboold
be grndnBlea or HND which
might be la Business Sindies,
LnnlDeerlBB or Aria, and age •
preferably 24/55 ao ax to
have ibe apportanlty far pro-
motion to management rea-
pamubUiUea In an exoendtng
C °An&ti should prefer-
ably be Uvlnaln tbe oonntJe*
mentioned. There ts a cob-
tnbalory pemlan scheme.
Write S.R-15808. Dally
Talenrapb. LC.4
btUiy ror penMoa octacmr aJ.er
nisi year.
Write wltb delaUi io Managing
Director. Pinnacle Electronic*
Ltd. ^Achilles SlrrcL New Cress,
EXPERIENCED
REPRESENTATIVE
REQUIRED
Live connections wltb
builders* merchant*, beetino
sad plumbing contracture
essential. Notts J Derby!
Lelcs. Full details in ibe
first Instance tn:
fialm Manager
King* Langley Engineering
Co. Lid..
King* Langley. Herts.
Tel. King* Langley 64022.
JLNECT0
CHEMIST
REPRESENTATIVE
lo sell fast-moving bale
cosmetics In Hants. West
Sussex. Gloucestershire.
Dunet and Wills. Experi-
ence In Balling on chemists
and proved sales recurd
esM.-ntlal. ■ Excellent salary,
cumin tuuun, bonuses and
cai iiruvldrd.
Applicants should live in
Soui 1 1 « .up ton. Winch eider
or Baaiogstokc.
Apply; L. Cribble Inuclo
Lid.. 52. Duvcr Street.
Loudon W1X 5KA. 01-493
7541.
Do you fllncerelv wl^i m
become so Outstandingly
fiumuiul
SALESMAN ?
—and earn Big Money;
— Uieo ibis Is your oooor-
Uinltyt
72 of our Salesmen earned
over £2.500 in 1970.
Due to the pending retire-
ment or Mr Leslie Wilkin-
son who has been * *ue-
E.-i/Tul Tniter 5almnan for
over 40 years, we arr nn-
puintlnq TWO . TRUTLX
Aren Salesmen:
(il for East Lancashire, in-
cluding Manchester, for
our Train Boys' School-
wear and Faptiton Wear
«nd Rave & Tonoer
Younq Men • Fashion
Shirts.
<bi For West Lancaahire. In-
cludlnp Llvenwol. and
pin Cheshire,, for the
above products and a ho
Trulex Girls* Scbool-
.. wear.
If you are already a good
Arcs Salesmen (any trade)
we wni show you our
proved method* . or " how
lo hetomc Outstandinaly
Bncceyyful.
TRUTEX are showinn
B^ottlrr bfq Increase on
19711 s record. Planned rx-
pcn-kin oivm you the op-
portunity to earn what von
are. worth — there fe vir-
tually no limit.
Ton will be ajHlsted by
n* Urinal edvertisinq. direct
■nulling. sell lap -out units
end aood orodactx-
-TMi-a»r. only feooly i£ yon
cun mow proof of some
wccps* In sclllnq nod nee
determined lo become oul-
stnndlaflly successful — we
can show you bow.
All ommncJoa Im been
from within. ■
Age' . group: . 21-55 pre-
ferred. .
Interview* In Llverooal end
Manchester.
All totters of application
wdJ be answered.
SH0PFITTING
REPRESENTATIVE
Required by Nairn WQJtamson
Groan for East Midlands /East
AonHa. Existing contacts with
scchllecf* and shoo granos pre-
ferred. Salary around £1.700 pins
bonus. Company car. Pension
scheme. Telephone Mr Ramsay.
01-668 1565 after 7 p.m.
1 .H. Rivclt.
Pales D- reel or.
rruiex Lid..
rirtndleiDB.
□itberae. Lanes.
SPECIALIST SALESMEN
/London area)
aged 22-28. preferably with
smt letarnationaily known com-
pany in thr London area. Our
policy af plaaned expansion pro-
vides an exciting opportunity for
young men lo promote sale* of.
Uw ADLER range of products
which to second to none in tbe
Bust nee* Machine field.
We offer good banc ralarv nnd
coaimtosdcn pin* other fringr
benefits IgchuNna car or car
aBowanco. gratuity scheme, ex-
bemea. etc. Our present sales-
men are currently tomttan In ex-
cess of £2.500 p.a. For further
details write In confidence »o. or
.Irtephone: Mr P. A. J. BoneftJ
iReloil Snlra MlaMW
5191. OFFICE .AND ELEC-
TRONIC MACHINES LTD.. J40-
148. Borough High BtrreL Lon-
don. S.E.l.
gany In the London area,
policy af planned expansion
APPLIED CHEMICALS
LIMI TED
We are au muibitotaed, reput-
able Company, the leader* m
our held, markaUsg a cum-
piota range ut l litemiral
Cleaning Froducla nnd Equip-
ment. and wb are angaued
in expanding our Food ln-
duutnui Division.
Wr need stx experienced
Bdlrsmen to Sell to Huteto.
HnlauraiiB. GalBflng Estab-
IKumrnts and Food Foctar-
■i3, la London and the
Hume Counties and in Bir-
mingham; wnlbt experience
mu ihew uuUets kvald be
an advantage, we provide
ihonougb product irqlnfng
and the ape ot man you ora.
kuur uutJook and am rude.
U. morn important than the
ouUi'l* yuu have sold tu.
This is an inure*! mg job
with a growing company
anp In addition to a guar-
anieed Iniume, ■nil over-nd-
inu comuu&Mon. Urn uviai
bi-ncb la are provided. Age.
au 50.
Please write with brief
career derails to: — D. W.
Humid. Marketing Director.
Applied Cbruuidls Limited.
Salisbury Kuad Industrial
La late, Uxbridge. Main.
BERENDS0HN A G.
OF HAMBURG
An oU-eetabLisaed West UeiBaaay
company seeks
DYNAMIC
SALESMEN
for London and Southern England
who are not oiraid ol hard bcU-
iimj u (he rewards are bigh. We
ari leader- in uur urld rn Luropr
rniJ art rapidly expanding in
Lngluiid in an interesting and
chui:,.nliig market. II you are
b'.'tw,<it -S and 03 sad sole iu
-l'II u.l luansuidH dire; lur level,
kumi end -cl Mr Rkke irum
Haulburp ai I lie ■(, -brand I
Huh.1. l bur lues Flair. S.W.7.
between 10 and 5. today
BUILDING MATERIALS
LcDdinp and rxnandina mntrs- Ol
F.V.L. UudoiDB, utc.. rrauire
repre.-edtulive. rxncrleaccd in
se.Lng iu Eylaie Deyelooera.
Builder*, Arebitcer- and Councils
‘"'home counties north
b.i-rd H>ila Carobs/Bed*
Salary £1.500 kl BflO
Flu* Comin;*siad.
Um., Co. Cat pension.
Win brick Plashes Ltd..
EiliMD Road. Salisbury.
MANUFACTURER’S
AGENTS
REQUIRED
SELLING TO INDUSTRY
Nationally known company pro-
ducing wail accepted rang* of
tnaialgoaohce products seeks
agents all porta of U.K. Generous
commission. -
Write initially brief details area
covered or sector industry to UA
14854. Daily Telegraph. E.C.4.
MICROFORM 5YSTEMS
University biicroOlms Lid., an
eptabltsfaed and expanding aub-
kidlary ot Ibe Xerox Group oi
Companies, bas a vacancy lor an
inlelllgral. go-abend man. ex-
perienced In the business systems
field, preferably with a major
organisation, to take charge at
their U.K. Marketing Depart-
mciiL
Tbe successful candidate will
probably be in his 50's and can
expect b substantial basic salary
plus CGDimfesioa.
Apply in confidence to V. G.
Stratford.
UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS .
LTD..
A Xerox Company,
St. Jobu'ia Bd., Tylers Green.
Fean. High Wycombe, Backs.
Penn 3844.
MOLECULAR CONSERVATION
LIMITED. Harronatr. Ynrkshirc.
ire Ini r rested In beefing from
successful
SALESMEN
who wish to run »h*ir own bo*i-
nrs* wiihnnt capital levratmenl.
Write Tor full details to -Mr. D. T.
Jones, or 'pbnne Peggy Lloyd,
at Harrogate 67641.
MARELA LIMITED
require a
SALESMAN/
MERCHANDISER
(or West of London
25-55 wars old to specia-
lise la tbe development of an
exciting- new product range.
Two years* min imam experi-
ence at *el1|pg and mercuan-
dtolng to Grocery Multiples -
w-ih a major company la ’
essential.
During the first 6 months
rhe applicant moat be pre-
pared to stay away trom
twine ar certain times.
Good salary plus incentive
bonus, usual allowances and
Company cor.
This to a fast expanding
company and the position
on era a splendid career oppor-
tunity to the right man.
Application* In writing to
GoBerai Sales Manager.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
for North East England. The
Leading manufacturers uf
scholastic and drawing pro-
duns require an expert repre-
sentative to canvas* wnale-
-dle and retail siailunery out-
lets In Yorkshire. Durham
nnd .Northumberland, based
preferably in the Leads area.
Basic salary £1.550 plu*
cuniniHloa io yield a 'oral
salary exeeedlnq £3.000.
] 60(1 Cuctina usual fringe
benetli-.. If you have n pro-
ven sale* record, nrefarahly
with a knowledge of tbs
slallonery trade, send lor *n
application form to. ^aies
Director. Hells International
Lid.. P-O. Box 5. L)n
Stourbridge. Worcestershire.
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
for Timber SOP Build im
Merc heat -riiwted in country
Iowa North ol London
An extreme need represenm-
tlvr Is required with proten
Bales ability <rad product
knowledge, preterably with-
in the 25 tn 55 age group.
WE are a rapidly expending pro-
fessionally or irnin led broker-
age with vacancies in London.
Southern and Mancbeaicur
ii reus. Our established suc-
cessful agent* are earning in
excess ol £600 per monlb.
U you leel we cun assist you
lo rBach your personal Income
target, telephone Ken Wright.
Hal Geld 690: Prior Burt-
Farchara 82821 ; John
Madden, Wilnulow 20164.
£5.000 A YEAR FOR YOU
No previous experience is
necessary for you to become
a anwrsrtuj Life, A»ur»o«
Consul. BIM with lead lag IN-
SURANCE. BROKERS. We*U .
train you to acblrve an In-
come uf over £5,000 p.s.
AS BROKERS WE OFFER
THE BL5 T POLICIES AND
UNIT TRUST FLANS
AVAILABLU NOT JUST
THOSE OF ONE COM-
PANY. Specially eeiectrd
lesda supplied ino cold can-
vassing). Excellent oppor-
tunities for. promotion. Sal-
ary- commtaaion. expense*,
pension, cic. lalereiews i*
Loudon and all major pco-
vi ana! era ire*. Write station
■pe iS5-45t- educaLmu and
ripmonte io: . A- Chals-
worth. Moron Webb Group.
Notwich Union House. New
Ru.id. Rnghlun UR PHONE
BRIGH.ON >02731 27822
AND ASK FOR ANDREW
CH A rs WORTH iTrensf er
eha.ge on long-dlslaoce call)
LONDON BASED Fa rming Put*,
uernuon needs eo emteriai
mao, or woman, to join a
S nog, lively team. Experience
both agriculture anti Jo or-
nailsm gKHitry and some
knowledge of magaeae uro-
- doctlon would be _ hriprui.
Sol ary neoaiia Me.— L.B. 15786.
Daily Telegraph. £.CA.
HUNTING recoDCT for s senior
retiauior wltb an nuxbUshed
aud progressive onset sod
tenerems Midlands primer.
Altrnctive salary, good condi-
tions. pension scbesue and ex-
cellent long-term apportunilles-
Apply in writing station ope.
rxoeriencr and oiulificatioos to
F.V. 15688. Daily Talegraph.
The Dotty Telegraph, Fridas, Jtdy 23, 1971
AN EXPERIENCED
P.A./SECRETARY
FOR COLOGNE
An uo usually Entemtlng
past xs P.A. Secretary to
tbe Sains Promotion Man-
ager of nn International Coro-
K ter Peripherals Company
>ed in Cologne! (s now
avallsbla. Tbe position re-
quires hinh Inteniornec.
good Icnnwlrdqe of German
and. desirably some French
and reliable shorthand typing.
Thh I* a progressive position
offere d on a two year basin
with further opportunities In
the company *nb«eqitently.
Salary negotiable in tbe
region nf £2.000 P.a.
For lurtber drtoQa tele-
phone Un L. Hopwood.
01-828 1288.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
RECKITT-& C0LMAN
TOILETRIES DIVISION
The makers of Jutxena
Shampoo. - Supeiwoft hair-
■prey, shampoo, etc . require
a first davs Salnsman resid-
ing un the territory to. call
on reran outlets in Surrey!
part Sussex ansa.
Applicants should be In
the age group B1 lo 50. Wo
ofier salary and commission.
Aral daw pension scheme,
all expense* paid and a com-'
paoy car Is provided.
Write lor Application form
to: Sales Training Manager,- -
R ecu it A Caiman TotlFtrfes
Division. Sunny dale. Derby.
DE2 9GG.
DEPARTMENT STORE
GROUP
Located in sou in Eastern JEuiud
requires
BUYER/
DEPARTMENTAL
MANAGERS
, ortJ* ,*sSwtt' ‘
3. SOFT FURNISHING! LINENS
Established In ihe early part
of ihc century tbe Group has
recently launched an expansion
programme and Is reorganising to'
meet the challenges of new Man-
agement Techniques.
. these positions offer: Progres-
sive, Salary Structure; Monthly
i Achievement Bonus: Annual Re-
units Bonus: Monthly Car Allow-
ance: N Da-Con tributary Pen* ton
Flan: Staff Discount Allowance:
Opportunities tar Fereonal Pro-
gram.
Enthusiastic dynnmfc. profes-
sions] applicants with relative
experience, accustomed to Man-
agement by Objectives. Target
Achievements, Budgetary Control
Techniques and In ihn age group
28-45 should apply. In writing,
together with curriculum vttnn.
to:
D -S.l 5764. Dolly Telegraph. -
Prompt Initial interviews win be
arranged either In London or la
applicants* locality.
FASHION BUYER
aged 24-37. urgently re-
quired by large store group,
based Croydon. Must bava
knowledge of lower priced
me rebuild iso suppliers. Good
salary etc. ‘ Phone A. D.
Goddard. 01-688 4488.
Required for company secre-
tory. Some legal experie nc e
desirable. Aped 21 + Sal-
ary Cl. COO + accordloBto
age and experience. 7Sp
L. V.*». p.w. OfBco hour*
9.30-6. 3 -day week.
apply In writing to the Com-
pany Secretary. Pye Records
Lid.. ATV House. 17 Great
Cumberland Flacn. London.
W.l.
TELEPHONIST
Lady, aged 21-40 required
for National Daily News-
paper. G.P.O. trained pref-
thorouohty experienced 1 A /
Lamp ■dnuallfnq board-
£31-50 per vrerk.
4 WEEKS’ HOLIDAY
Write T.L.9278 Dally Tale-
graph. E.C.4, or ptaooa MTS
Wallace 355 4242.
TRANSLATORS HOUSE
require experienced translator*
and t ypb Ha for work Into thn
following langnagna:
French — Italian
Fwedisb — Dutch
Dan lob— -Spanish
Telephone 242 0S53.
ii ■ n 1 1 ■>!
mmm
Grafton Way, London.
CHARLES OF THE RTRB
MARSHALL S* SN ELLG ROVES
OF LONDON
An experienced
SALESWOMAN
Is requited for lie position
of Brauly Consultant. Ap-
plicant* mini have good
anting ability and be ovar
25 years of age. Cosmetic
experience not renantial. fall
ssa or ttrw «
B ouse. 113. Fane Lane,
indoa, W.l.
OFFICE VACANCIES
PA./SECRETARY
■to Enqfnrarfnq Director of
large rnWromneotnl rngl no rr-
Ing com Dun v near . -Kings
Cron* ami (isMd Stmion*.
Applicants. . need 22-55,
should Jure had sound com-
iw-rtid experience, logrtbcr
with ■ first -class shorthand
nnd typing. In return we
offer -• B . salary Ot around
£1.400 p.a. inn fiber with
mrllrnt . . conditions . In
modem - air - conditioned
offices- Hour* 8.45 a.m.-
t .15 P-m. Monday-Frlday.
weeks' holiday. 1 week
paid holiday tbto year.
For nn apporndnent pleom
tclcpboae or write to: R_ F.
£P». MfttM Y8H!
'ugftV’JSn; 1 ’ To, * obo -
ST THOMAS'S HOSPITAL,
LONDON. S.8.I.
TRAINEESHIP
^ FOR HOSPITAL -
CATERING OFFICERS
Thr Governors offer &
Traineeship for mala and
female appH cants at tha
rain af £975 per annum for
a two years’ training course.
Training apprenticeship in
cookery and allied subjects,
or the poaseaskm of a re-
dwmised diploma or ccrtifl-
colc, and 5 years' cooking
experience is essential m
applicants (aged 25 to . 55) ■
who should apply In writing
liumediaiely with the name*
of two referees to: Mrs
Gray. Personnel Officer.
DOMESTIC
SITUATIONS WANTED
G5p per Una
SECRETARY
MEDITERRANEAN
SEA AND SUNSHINE
Jong, hot dry summers and
cool winters: good beaches
and outdoor sporting activi-
ties; a salary ol over £2.000
per annum aflsr tu and
other deductions; Bat or villa
rental paid; return air fare
paid nod lo and from its
U.K. for one moolh'a annual
leave; addltiODal local leave:
modern air conditioned
offices. All this can be yours
working as a secretary with
MobB Oil Libya Limited at
Head Office In TrlpoU.
It you are single, coed
25-35. hold recognised cer-
tificate* for shorthand/iypinq
fet 90/45 w.p.m. min Imam
and a current driving licence,
cleave write to:
Miv* J. M - ranont.
MOBIL OIL CO. LIMITED.
„ Mobil Hume.
54160. Victoria Street.
Loudon, S.W.l.
tjve to required tvilh proton
Boles ability uad product
knowledge, preterably with-
in the 25 to 55 age group.
Prospects are excellent for
the right man, with good
commenting salary, contri-
butory pension H&cme. pro-
fit snarlnfl and com puny
vehicle.
Applications la writing to;
Group Pen*J one! and i comma
Uuuuar. .
Jcweoa and hope United.
Criaglerord,
Norwich. NOR 04 a
lA member of the Inierautional
Timber Corporation!
Pto*w write l'o - "fj.4B2n lfe, r{ ,B r*
Telegraph. E.c.4. Z0 * D “‘ !?
mm^
mmagemem
The growth of Michelin's manufacturing
activities in the U.K. and the developing
technologies of tyre production, give rise to
the need for an increasing number of engineers
in the management team. Development is
initially likely to be in such fields as •
production-engineering services or management
services. Subsequently there will be
opportunities in departmental or factory
management
The requirements are for chartered or
graduate engineers
ieetncaf
production
• with experience of management and a
willingness to accept appointments' at any '
Michelin factory in the U.K.
To ensure age balance in the management team
the company prefers to recruit engineers in
their late twenties or early thirties. Salary
' requirement will not of itself, be a bar to
recruitment
Write with career development details to:-
D. C. Jeffrey. Ref: S41 / OT
Michelin Tyre Co. Ltd.. Stoke-on-Trent
Staffs. ST4 4EY.
FIRST FOR CAREERS
Sales Training
Manager
The man appointed to this position will be
operating from strength. Already product leaders
in the small capital goods market, our clients are
now looking to their sales force to build on this
lead. The new Sales Training Manager will there-
fore be a vital member of this S.E. London based
organisation.
He will be responsible for forging a keen
existing-sales force of about 50 into a razor sharp
marketing weapon. His authority will extend
from the classroom to the field, where most of his
efforts will lie. With this company the "field "
means the whole of the UK.
The man appointed, probably between
28-35, will be more than capable of devising and
introducing his own programmes and syllabuses :
he will be enthusiastic enough to prefer it that
way. A sound record of solid selling experience
(preferably in parallel marketing activities) will be
as important to the job as a convincing line of talk. '
A company car comes with a salary of
around £2.800 plus generous Group benefits. '
Please write or telephone 01-499 0477 for
application form (quoting reference 8524/DT) to
W. Richardson, who is advising our client on this
appointment
T i -■ v- ft
Astral Recruitment Advertising
13/19 Maddox Street, London W1 R 0EY
COST ACCOUNTANT
This is am exceptional opportunity for a man
between 22 and 32, qualified A.CWA or
equivalent, with good practical experience in
cost accountancy, to enhance his career pros-
peats in an' interesting but demanding
■ appointment The successful applicant would
£ ’ jin a specialised Cost Installation team directed
y the Group Cost Accountant, and while he
would be based on Glasgow Head Office, he
would periodically work on location elsewhere
in the U-K- and overseas.
ASSISTANT
COST ACCOUNTANT
We also require for this team a young man
recently qualified, or presently studying for final
exAins.
Successful applicants win be trained in Company
or overseas.
Apply in writing, giving age and full details of
education, qualifications, experience and present
salary, level, to :
Group Personnel Manager
COATS PAT0NS LTD.
155 St Vincent Street,
Glasgow, G2. . .
&
GENERAL RADIO
SYSTEM SERVICE ENGINEER
Eow would VOU like to
L WINTER IN CALIFORNIA
2. Be paid a GOOD SALARY
5. Hava a BONUS
4. Drive a COMPANY CAR
5. Enjoy the usual FRINGE BENEFITS of a forward-
- looking Company.
YOU could IF
L YOU have extensive experience of complex digital,
systems. .
2. YOU have knowledge of both computer hardware and
software (ideally PDP11).
3. Additionally, YOU have a good general electronics
background up Co at least HJV.C. standard.
4. YOG would be prepared to leave for 6 months In
California immediately on appointment. ,
5. YOU are a British subject.
<L YOU could start with us immediately.
If you would like to be considered for this extremely
Interesting and challenging position please phone or write;
The Manager,
GENERAL RADIO CO. (U.K.) LTD.
Bourne End. Backs. 8L8 SAT.
XcL: BoiUme End 22567.
OFFICE SALES ENGINEER
Required preferably with experience of sub-
mitting quotations for specialised machine tools
for customers. Applicants must have had
workshop training with sound engineering
background, aged between 25/35. Future pros-
pects with good conditions, canteen, pension
scheme. Write giving age and full details of
experience and qualifications to:
Manager, Gleason Dfoiaon, "
BUCK & HICKMAN LIMITED,
• Otterspool Way, Watford By-Pass, Watford.
BEECHAW
We are looking for :
- if
SIM
Trnrrmr irlH Mr m
’ 'For: mit' fiOfrii-."
. 'Syhtheticr
7 ^pcnicTf Itn ;
: piantijp. our.. new*'.'
□ to be responsible for dealing with day to day process
problems, involving yield and quality.
□ who should have worked in a factory synthesising
organic chemicals and hive been involved with trouble
shooting and process investigations.
a chemical engineer
□ to be responsible for dealing with problems involving
process plant
□ who should be familiar with all unit operations involving
batchwise organic chemical syntheses up to a 500 gallon
scale.
We require young dynamic graduates who have had at isast
one years industrial experience in a chemical factory.
Knowledge of French would be an advantage.
Please send your curriculum vitae giving details of
qualifications and experience to the Personnel Manager,
Beecham S.A., 6211 Heppignies, Belgium, interviews will be
held in London.
EPSYLON INDUSTRIES LTD.
invites applications from
E
ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS
are invited to apply for positions as members of
project teams engaged in:
1. The design and development of airborne audio
■ and data recording systems.
2. The design and development of data logging
equipment.
5. The design and development of ground data
• translation systems. Knowledge of computer
peripherals and interfaces would be an
advantage.
Salary £1,500^2,000 per annaim.
QUALITY ASSURANCE AND
RELIABILITY ENGINEERS
are invited to apply for a position as a key
member of tfhe project team to implement the
Quality -Assurance and Beliability Programme
associated with, military airborne equipment with
the ability to accept ultimate responsibility for
the programme.
Attractive sriary to the right person.
The Company, which is a- member of the Leigh
Canada Group, offers a friendly working atmos-
phere m a new factory, and a pension and life
assurance scheme.
Applications to: Personnel Officer,
EPSYLON INDUSTRIES LTD.,
1, Mount Road, Hanworth, Middx.
y.vJ
TAMPAX
LIMITED
■ *i
Export Assistant
The Export Manager requires a male Assistant
in Ms Department where the turnover, already,
large, is expanding rapidly.
Applicants should have experience of, and a
lively and aggressive attitude to, the marketing
of consumer goods; preferably Export but U.K.
experience would be a valuable alternative.
The successful person would share with another
the responsibility for administration of all
marketing and shipping functions under the
supervision of the Export Manager.
Preferred age 23-80 years; salary according to
age and experience.
Excellent working conditions and canteen. Non-
contributory pension and life assurance scheme.
Interviews can be arranged at Havant (in the
evening or at week-end if necessary).
Write, giving brief details of education and
experience, to: —
EXPORT MANAGER
Tampax Ltd., Havant, Hampshire, poo sdg
'WmIi 1
I « I
At least two responsible and interesting posts
for men'as Investigating Officers in the Accidents
Investigation Branch. Although based in London,
officers must be prepared to fly at short notice
to the scene of an accident in any part of the
world.
The work involves evaluation of the engineering
aspects of aircraft accidents including detailed
examination and assessment of wreckage, both in
situ and at base; critical perusal of relevant
documents; interviewing witnesses; giving evidence
at public inquiries; and compiling reports.
Candidates must have a sound technical and
practical knowledge of turbine powered aircraft,
and have been employed in at least one of the
following fields of aircraft engineering: design;
production: maintenance; inspection. Preference
will be given to Chartered Engineers or holder,
of a relevant degree.
The salary scale is £2,067-£2.549, with prospects
of promotion to posts carrying salaries of £3.320
and above. Non-contributory pension scheme.
For foil details and an application form (to be
returned by 17 August, 1971) write to Civil
Service Commission, Alencon Link, Basingstoke,
Hants, or telephone BASINGSTOKE 29222.
extension 500. or LONDON 01-839 1696 (24
hour ‘Ansafone ' service). Please quote
reference T/775I.
INSTITUTE FOR INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH AND STANDARDS
iRELAND.
(Chemistry Department)
Applications are Invited for the above post in
the Surface Coatings Section of the Chemistry
Department.
This post is intended for a technician with at
least two years' laboratory experience in the
field of paint technology.
Appointment will be made at Technician Grade
1 level; minimum academic qualifications:
Science Laboratory Technicians' Certificate
of the City and Guilds of London Institute,
or two approved science subjects »t G.CE.
Advanced Level, or an approved equivalent
SALARY: within the range £I,167-£1,690 per
annum.
CONDITIONS: five-day week; non-contributory
Superannuation Scheme, contributory Widows’
and Children's Pension Scheme
Application forms are available from THE
PERSONNEL MANAGER, INSTITUTE FOR
INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH AND STANDARDS,
BALLYMUN ROAD. DUBLIN 9, IRELAND, wire
should receive completed forms not later than
August 24, 1371.
ENGINEERS
SPACE PROGRAM
Wo nqiUra fully Quitted Engineers for permanent cmptojumul
b> WEST GERMANY In Iba folloming Acids
PRODUCT ASSURANCE
EMI or EMC apoelaiuLs
QUALITY ASSURANCE (ELECTRONIC)
Expr-rtaK* to design r rvuw. process review, test nrocrdurc. ablo
to devise MRB Bittern.
RELIABILITY (ELECTRONIC)
Retrains extensive circuit experience. Will review test dais.
I allure mode effect* and criticality mrslytta no syKems. sub-
systems and components.
SYSTEMS
— OPERATIONAL SYSTEMS — - TEST — INTEGRATION —
Planning, mf!lo*j bpecs, and dlrcctJmJ or siuxonirodon.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Development end tuMinn of S Baud telemetry twrems. Digital
or analod experience id spare systems or ground check-oni
system;).
ELECTRICAL POWER Sr POWER
DISTRIBUTION
— SOLAR CELL APPLICATIONS — POWER CONDITIONING
— BATTERIES — __
Planning, writing specs., barned layout, deal rag wim sub-
comtuKton.
thermal modr
merlM'
idrlUnn i
THERMAL
and 'vitfi suiwwitnietwi.
benefits,
Interviews will be heW In London. Please telephone 01-574
335* lor latorrtew- details.
TECHNISCOPE LTD.,
Phoenix Bouse. The Green. . SouUulI. MMdt.
oka oppeof «" pages
20, 21, 22# 23 ond 24
ELDON ELECTRIC LTD.,
Unit 27, Central Trading Estate, Staines, Middx.
To f ulfil our plans to expand our activity in the
TJX, we wish to appoint a
DEVELOPMENT ELECTRICAL ENGINEER
and a
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
The ELECTRICAL ENGINEER will be required
to identify, evaluate and control technical
aspects of the Company’s diversification in both
the domestic and industrial field. The appoint
ment will be based in Staines. ... .
The SALES REPRESENTATIVE will be
responsible for the development of sales to the
s in the Midlands and some experience m seUin _
= to these irdurtrics will be an advantage. ■=■
5 Salaries and other benefits are negotiable ana =
= will be appropriate to the experience, ability =
s . and energy of the successful applicants. 5
a Pleasa apply initially to: =
= b7 E. V- Jervis, General Manager. =
siiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiriiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiKiKiiiiiimiiiiuiiiiiiiiiriiririniiimiriiiiiiiiriiimiiiiiiTi
Circa £2,500
A well known mobile capital equipment manu-
facturer requires a Manager to control the
Guarantee Claim Department This is a senior
appointment and the man responsible will control
all claims from customers and distributors, and
claims made by the Company on major suppliers
of equipment
The successful applicant will have the ability to
negotiate at high and low levels with firmness
and tact. Good electrical, hydraulic and mech-
anical engineering knowledge are necessary re-
quirements.
The fob involves the detailed statistical analysis
of all claims. A knowledge of the use of com-
puters for this type of analysis would be aq
advantage. Applicants should have had previous
experience in a similar capacity In the fork lift
truck, earlhmoving, commercial vehicle or auto-
motive industry.
Assistance with relocation would be provided iF
necessary. There is Pension and Free Life Assur-
ance.
Write In some detail to: G.M.18020, Dally
Telegraph, E.C.4.
Accountant
£3,081 to £3,579
required to take charge of -Budset and
Costing Section in FINANCE DIVISION,
also to contribute in ricsiun and imple-
mentation of systems for Cost Analysis
and Control. Annual revenue expendi-
ture £26 million: capital budget £15
million.
Applications invited from professionally
qualified accountants for this new pnsL
wide experience in management account-
ing and in related computer applications
is essential and membership of British
Computer Society an advantage.
Arpl/rntfnns and farther details. rrtuni-
nble by 9 August, from Director. Public
Health Engineering fAE/2?5t, W Great
Ganrne St.. S AV.l. (QJ-859 779.9, pit. -159 th
KS r ,r3i MWTtR LONDON COUNCIL
P EU ft.-**
ifi. Department of
iJi.iJfrA Public Health Enginee ring
San a eo is Britain’s most go-ahead computer utility and a
member company of the international Smith & Nephew Group.
There is a continuous programme of expansion
in regional sales centres where local call facilities are
established, ami Lhe opportunities are endless.
Applicants currently earning not less than £ 3.000 pjL,
should write to Mr. W. BaJderson, Soles Manager.
sanaco
computerservices
Sanaco Comp liter Services, Woodlands Road, Birmingham B8 3BD
'Phone: 021-772 8331
R. TWINING AND CO. LTD.
REQUIRE A
CATERING m VENDING PRODUCTS
This is a new appointment in a major British
company engaged in the beverage market The
company is based 70 miles from London, and is
part of a large international group. It has already
embarked on a successful programme of expan-
sion both in this country and overseas.
The Product Manager will report direct to the
U.K. Marketing Manager. On appointment he
will assume responsibility for all existing pro-
ducts within the company’s catering and vending
range, and within a short space of time will be
expected to make a major contribution to the
profilabie development of this sector of the
company’s business.
The successful candidate is likely to be a
graduate to the 25-30 age group. Certainly he
will have gained a minimum of two years experi-
ence in the control of national grocery or cater-
ing products, and will now be looking Far
increased responsibility. Successful experience
of new product introductions would be can-
considered a particular advantage.
Salary will be negotiable up to £3,000 p.a. How-
ever, this figure could be increased for an
exceptional candidate. Car provided.
Please write for an application form to Mr A. J.
Spencer (Personnel Manager), South Way,
Andover, Hampshire.
'' •'■•'--'I"
RHP Britain's leading Bearing Group is looking
for:
THREE EXPORT EXECUTIVES
For
— Continental Europe
— Africa and Middle East
— Latin America
The ideal candidates will be between 25 and 35
years of ape with at least 2 years' commercial
experience salting a technical product in overseas
markets and conversant with at least one foreign
language.
Personality and selling ability are the foremost
requirements, however a technical background
will be an added advantage.
The successful candidates will be based at Ferry-
bridge, Yorkshire, and spend at least 50 per cent,
of their time in their territory.
Written applications to the Personnel Manager.
I rrajQm© : 'H CriTm arta; Pol lard’’Lf
Training Development & Consultancy
Thn Grocers' Institute, the professional hn.Jv serving aU
sectors of grocery distribution, jnulcs apj'Ucatians for
two posts in the training department, —
a Senior
Training Development Officer
preferred age 30-40, salary around £3,250
~ra
preferred age 27-35, salary around £2,400
Both Jobs will Involve maintaining rontnet with enm-
panic*. In London and lhe Smith Ea-r, proiirimg
ailvlHtry and rnnsiiH.mcy services and helping to develop
the Institute's range of special i«c«l tralaiu^ activities.
The Senior T.D.O. will also he ri'.pon<lblr for n>.
ordinj'tinS the work of llir iwo T.D.ON in lhe n-cinn.
Expcrienre In creative training work is a prerequisite
non ranriiriales should have a »le<jrrr or equii.ilcnt
proles* ion a l ■‘lunJifiralinn. Experience in distribution,
m.innzcment ileiclnpment. sales training or personnel
manage me ill will be un added ad\ outage.
Successful rancllrf.-itrs will lie based nn the Institute’*
new training irnlrc In the nmthern nul-hirls nf i«nrinn
A car will be pi-ovlitcil and bcneliLs iinludi- Tree life
insurance and a roiilrilniliu v pension srhrmn.
Apply, giving an outline of education and experience, to;
4. It. Simpson. Dirrctiir of Training,
TtlE GROCERS' INSTITUTE.
50. Doughty Street, l^mdnn WCiN 2LT.
f ' i ! 1 m WH'lTiiifP
H.M. PRISON, WAKEFIELD
WakcrSclri‘ ,CJr TcchnirIan 13 re q u « rc 4 at HJ«. Prison,
£ ?, 32 ris!na ,n C *' 101 Plus £M per annum
environment aUntv.'nie. and .idihflnnat allowance up to
niD Tor suitably qiulifir-.i applk.inLs.
w T k - i '°' t * u Po«*annudtilo under NH5 super,
onnuntiou «clr;me. H 1
lowef ^
S?rhiI5 pCm^fT' \v.Sfi ll,rorwaUc,B £nm
Am|» 1" .it ion foimv uM.nnabl" irnm the EfoibTIshment
°V , ! rp ' r, rl! * ua HeparlmrnL tK 20/20 VDCj.
rartLacd Hnii.sc, dl.it; Pl,u p. Lonriort, S.Vr.L
firsmcld/banWng
experience
We are looking for a man
wilh a biaw-Iedge of the Commercial, Finanriai
and Banking world. A man of some standing
and who is conversant with the City.
' eippiyif to
computer
timesharing
As this is a senior position demanding
active development of business potential,
applicants should be aware of the role of
the large computer utility in business and industry,
and preferably the part that timesharing plays.
in our
London Heolonal
REPRESENTATIVES
mWITHTECHNICAL
N0W-H0W'
mMi
m
ii
m
a
p large and well -established company is-
forming a new unit to extend its considerable
interests in British and world fashion.
Here is a rare opportunity to enjoy the
challenge and excitement of creating a net./
force in the world of fashion — -whilst
benefiting from the excellent service
conditions and generous salaries typical Oi 3
long -established and substantial
organisation.
In this job you will be marketing to weavers,
converters, knitters and makers-up operating
in the fashion area.
Essential qualifications are: experience of ^
selling to the clothing and/or textile trades:
and good appreciation of fashion and design
trends coupled with some knowledge of
garment manufacturing problems. Experience
of mari.etfng fusible interlinings would be an
advantage. Forthepostin Leicester, particular
knowledge and contacts with the knitted
outerwear trades in the Midlands would ba
desirable.
Applications, giving full details of experience,
may be accompanied by a covering note
listing organisations to whom you do not
wish your name to be forwarded. Write in
strict confidence to:.J. Deacon. Senior
Appointments Officer. Promark Management
Confidential Reply Service, Old Colony
House. South King Street, Manchester M2
6 DU. quoting ref. 32/ A
}PM\
Promark Management
Confidential Reply Service j
8€P enC0S ? MANAGEMENT
r-j--- ; OPPORTUNITIES
\MACE\ NON-FOODS and
FRESH PRODUCE
ansi on in this substantial Company with
creates a need for two experienced and progressive
men to establish arid dcvplop new departments.
NON-FOODS EXECUTIVE Si oTrtus 0 ^-
P! a aned
business.
Applicants most have a gi od knowledge of textiles,
electrical goods and houss wares generally. Experi-
ence in buying these com nodi ties, together, with a
real ability to merchandise and promote their sale
is essential
SALARY — Negotiable irouad £2,500
FRESH PRODUCE EXECUTIVE 8F*tfi M 55
chase and sales of fresh \ reduce to ensure a profit-
able operation through, w olesaie, and retail outlets
is the purpose of this app lintmenL Applicants must
have a thorough and cot prehe naive knowledge of
the fresh produce mar Wet, and be able to deal
effectively with growers ind first-hand distributors.
Ability to apply modern marketing methods to fresh
produce is also essential The age range for both
positions is likely to be 27-40. Conditions of em-
ployment are first-class a id include a Company car,
and assistance with i smoval expenses, where
applicable-
SALARY— Negotiable aroind £2,000
Initial applications, inchlding brief details of age,
experience and present : alary should be sent t»: —
The Personnel and Training Manager,
ARTHUR RICHARDSON & SON LIMITED,
Dept. T., MACE HOUSE. LAMBOURNf DRIVE, WOLLATON,
NOTTINGHAM NG8 1G5. \
A vacancy exists for ai officer in the rank of
Lieut. -Commander in a small Naval Arm
operating under fornt G.H.Q. organisational
arrangements on the A abian Gulf.
The successful applican wifi be responsible to
the Commander, Naval Arm, for all aspects of
operational and adminis rative efficiency and to
ensure that the standar Is of training of Naval
Arm personnel are appropriate to their tasks.
His duties will also invt Ive:
co-opcrjflon with ofhir arms as necessary;
seaward parrols again# illegal immigration
ana other unauthorised! vessels in tamtorial
waters; \
International air/sea qearch and rescue
operations;
protection of fishing vessels within territorial
waters:
hvdrofiraphic surveys to the 'limit of equip-
ment carried.
For details of terms and conditions of service
V lease write to N.C.1S01B. Daily- Telegraph. EC4.
CONSUMER PRODUCTS
DIVISIONAL MANAGER
Co e r"pro d *lTi vi^i □'ir.^TW app en t° vrtU 1 e
acconntanllitir for the total
Snroh— n,anaser wm bo abIc to prove that he can
n sales team •
•menial accounts function •
Imccastlns 'J
negotiation with major cuitomcrs. both Wbalefele
Jiiu retail. [
SdinPqwf bB conversailt coosnmer advertising
Candidates prercrably should W= under 45 veare of ace
jmd have had experience relevant to the abov^
They should be asrcressivcly profit conscious
record of sucresslu] marketing with fast-movbi^mn^f
""•tartN. The ability to
ftSSSaL m ° UVata SalM i ataff to achieve obKv«
An excellent salary is negotiable with
pension and other benefits, * ; CvotnoutOry
Please write, stating how eachjrcqulrement is met tm—
n . .. . , , Th® Pe ««to»el Manager,
Sostik Ltd STmw! 1 Boad ’
FULL PAY WITH TRAINING
!f you are about 18 years of a?e and' possess 5 G.CE,
7 ^ ^ levo '' lndudln S English Language and
Mathematics, we can offer you a 3»i to 4 years oourse of
practical training Ut the finance organisation of the hotel
and catering business, with college training by block
release or sandwich courses and a commencing saiarv
of £890 per annum.
start this September
Apply now to the Bead of Personnel
|P% BRITISH TRANSPORT HOTELS LTD.,
■^ axicras Chambers London N.W.l.
3e
sote:
scTi
* I »x
•<, . Il,
• ti-ANa
-05.
v 7 Hoff
u •
Ca,
— 'I'T
i V , r***l
: l co*.
-“KS
. L "hT
*0UD.
*'t *nT.
films
k.- :
& Bewitched by
0 violence
• '
\ ' ^ By ERIC SHORTER
^XpCET thee to a nunnery,” the acting, except for Oliver
OT saia iiamtet scorn- Reeds performance as Crandier,
• : fully to Ophelia; and all-too-potcnt priest to whom
<re than one scholar has Me ladies of Loudun seem ever
Rested that a nunnery re , v t0 ev i ,f >se Lheir charms.
:n was not as holy as we Hitherto Mr Reed has seemed
gbt think. Well, everybody me -V a " actor of external
3\vs that the nunnery in ,l . , is lrue thal onco
. h-century Louduawasnit ?„*, Un hjs ,H b,ue e -' es ind
• pectable eithe^aV moustache are a clumsy jn-
- after % *® ast Nation of the appeal such as a
iden finr» P ♦ B?S t0 °^ a ' ? an u: ou,d have for *uth nuns.
w raD u Cy j t0 3 P r,est £ u . 1 thl . s Hme his bulkish m.i'.cu-
’^perz
om she had not seen but *
• 0S I exploits she had 1
ird of, vividly. r
unit)' yields a hint oF iniriligrucc.
iou can believe that be has n
mind as well.
ti, *L w ® rke ® U P a Play WelTs-i?h decor, perpetual carn-
the book and it was a "*- masked spectators, nude *
tea at the Aldwych by the n . uns - na«tv tortures, and fugi- «!S8*S
yal Shakespeare Company f ' ve actor5 From Joan Liitle-
"tie 10 years ago. Ea st S C0mp3nv at StratFord w '
»Vhat happened for those who
In’t keen trarir* nT^niZ „ Cdn you imagine For a si art
-• ■menfolk f more ed thln fpriJus Ea&emT ” d *
vys of celibacy normall/allow; a Aw^ Ca rdm ' C * Ttvt, \ ■ C "»
d though he himself had ni pl u R ' rh, '*' u s
nproraised his lechery and his e n thus! a 2(r B « p nn^F 3 '
Igloo to satisfy his conscience £\L,!! US ]fi u Sl,r ~ e ° n of
king, and particulariv a ” chn PP p J-s, prongs, and
helieu, his chief henchman, eu instruments,
v the opportunity of using the RInod f*i1^
«ts reputation to destroy DIOOQ 3X1(1 Dlle
-- • towns political indepen- OF course, you can’t. Such
■.- 1 : c ,r, * ' players are made for rente.
* they needed was evidence. Hence the presence of Max
ssip was widespread. But Adrian as the other jokey sur-
•t.-. . . drnce was still needed for geon (though ironically enough
■; t •&> * « -S: ■' ■■■■■:
her ernlic visions of a priest she
has never met. But lechery was
never in this actress’s line. The
other sisters doff their undies
lo simuidle an orgy but the style
nf the debauchery and deca-
dence (which includes a kinky
king and his kinkier courtiers.'
looks more suited to revue than
melodram. 1 .
The general result is there-
fnie an hysterical account oF
an unusually hysterical situa-
tion: seething with more sen- i
finality than sense, and very
proud of its make-up skills.
Air Reed, for example, dies on
the slake wilh exceptional
witch-hunt. So, in order to this accomplished actor bought { , s,ake V 11 ”... e _* c t?- , na
J it, they had to try and some power to Whiting’s plav at L‘i« rac ^ „ a ^ ljstcrs -
■ve that the man was a the Aldwych in the role of a 0n l- a i It L?ii 0Ql ~ sty
cerer and that his sorcery Catholic priest).
:ited the lust of the hnnch-
:ked Mother Superior.
None of these important per-
sons carries any weight. Nor
\ saucy tale? That may be (more important lv’» does the
fling it crudely, but Ken language. In John Whiting's
espousing freedom and hooesty
lo the last and, as a colleague
remarked, done to a turn.
Mr Russell. I suspect, became
mure shocked by the story of
tth^t happened at Loudon than
sseM’s new film The Devils play some semblance of dignity mana ? cd JP convey to
a rner Rendezvous “X”) is was achieved — an implied ack- audience; and his apparently
*.— ■ hiog if not crude and finds nowledgement that these people r " r c p d frankness brings less in-
-hly outspoken material in in those times were not just 1 into w-omans se\ualit>'
■"nun's frustrations being used larking for effects. They had ,. n , a sadly simple line on so-
denouDce a priest of daDger- offices and devotions and duties f. . Treudiana the assume
:Iy political power. Father which meant that their problem a everyone is possessed
tndier goes thus to the stake mattered more than its scenic ° t j C .\f irae sexua * a PPetite and
some kind of male witch effects. ,1fvds three S( J uare mea,s a dav -
ose reputed need for women With Mr Russell nothing The point of the story, though
ose reputed need for women With Mr Russell nothing
; sent transports of erotic de- seems to matter seriously except
it (and envy) rippling raven- the next sensation; the next tor-
■ly through an Ursubne ture. the next orgasm, the next
■vent. frustration, the next flame, the
All of which makes a first- next explosion, the next shav-
e story. It does not, however, ing, the next corpse. Blood and
ke a first-rate film because bile flow together throngh his
Russell seems too Intent on film. Smoke and sensua-lity are
■eking us, too indifferent to its theme,
quality of the dialogue in Vanessa Redgrave writhe
screenplay, and wholly un- more or less chastely as the-
icerned about tbe quality of frustrated Mother Superior with
altered more than its scenic °* ^ same sexual appetite and
f ecits needs three square meals a dav.
With Mr Russell nothing The point of the story, though
ems to matter seriously except ' iMstarly stated, came forward
e next sensation; the next tor- VV|| h lucidity and force. There
re. the next orgasm, the next ' VH ' i npver an 5’ doubt what it was
ustratinn. the next flame, the about — no question who
!\1 explosion, the next shav- v,,s v,- ho and whv. And no ques-
g, the next corpse. Blood and fi, .n either that Mr Russell sees
le flow together throngh his an acceptable modern attitude
m. Smoke and sensuality are 1,1 r >randier s celebration of sex
; theme. wtn women as a way of getting
Vanessa Redgrave writhe neare c to God.
Gemma Jones and Oliver Reed in *" The Devils.’'
PROTESTERS FAIL TO
STOP MUSEUM SALE
By TERENCE MULLALY
D ESPITE protests, objects from the Hove Museum
were sold at ChrisJJes yesterday for £14,555. A
statement by National Heritage, the museum’s action
group, distributed at the ♦saleroom, warned bidders that
buyers’ rights of owner- j-
ship might be challenged, object not required unless it was
* , c _ . , aHected by a trust.
The sale of fumituj^e, “The money will be put into
Eastern rugs and carpets, an art fund to purchase other
objects of art, clocks and objects for the museum.”
musical instruments was by Top price in the sale was 820
order of Hove Corporation ffns (Woods Wilson) for a 19th
following delays in building a century. Japanese lacquer and
new museum On Wednesday porcelain-mounted cabinet and
Hove Civic Society asked at \ d ® Re Seacy writing
Christies not to hold the sale. table made 490 gQS CCross) '
In museum circles, and among
art lovers, it is feared that it sets
a dangerous precedent. Cither ce l estia l and terrestnal globes,
authorities may decide to sell pintnrec and win*
works long on view lo the, pub- ncmres ana wine
lie and donations may be dis- The first day of Christie’s,
cou raged. two-day sales of pictures and
drawings brought in £18,915, and.
their wine sale £24,220.
)n the road with Lear s h “
¥VAUA • A - /VyWA a nomadic Afghanistan horseman
|ETER BROOK’S Eng Lear black and white harshness of sS^!!
ArSoJe 1 in some obscurely tedious cause
A **) treads gingerly the purpose. The play s theme bears connected with the Generation
id to Dover with its majestic down upon us. ^" nec ^ e 0 a t lanv filmf ^th so
anderin^ and^paternal But the plight of its cenlral much action can have proved so
uues a od Shakespenan flights figure does not. Mr Scofield deeolv dull Screenplay with
philosophy. murmurs all the memorable fines ppeEdo-biblical dialogue by
dfe tries to make of it a con- With sensitive understanding and. Dalton Trumbo, and direction by
"sation piece. A conversation, intelligence. He makes sure wc j 0 hn Frankenheimer.
re moreover in which the know what th ey mean. And
..g is^en i’ aL iSSpath occasionai sub-titles remind us * ^ *
c rascal and the daughters ^hat is happenmg lest Mr Bh, e Water. White Death
rin-h+c Scofield should not have done FStudin One. "U ’) Is one for
Setback for Sharif
Legality questioned ' their wine sale £24,220.
The action group’s statement 1 —
°to eC tie ha n?^u'n? *5 EMERALD CARVING
questioned the legality of the £97,832 jewel sale
sale, adding: “We reserve the _ . . , T .. ,
right, at any time in the ifuture. At Sotheby s,_aQ i^dian carved
to challenge the title of success- enierald wei„hine, carats
bidders to any objects by fpr
bought.”
£25,000. The subject is the re-,
capture of Sita from Ravan,
talton Trumbo, and direction by
c rascal and the daughters c-ffi-ij ^
ry much withi-n their rights, Jf c of ^ ld , sl
rile the play is vaguely made *" s * wk -
appear as something under Bu| t
e influence of Samuel Beckett properly
id Poland’s Professor Jan not, he
ott dragon an,
_ . . , ,, - honest ttie
It is not so modi a world of j s i
ankJess children as of gene- w j t |j ^ ven
1 thankless indifference. nPfln rf n npi
lat is happening, lest Mr B[ U e Water. White Death
oficld should not have done FStudio One. ’*U”) is one for
5 work. the school holidays: the saga
But his authority is not of a search by underwater
properly established. " Come cameramen for the most danger-
not,” he says, “ between the ous of all sharks. Always good
dragon and his wrath.” To be and sometimes thrilling as long
honest there is no sign of either, as it stays beneath the surface.
This is low-keyed Shakespeare
with a vengeance: written in the
grand poetical manner. For grand
1 thankless indifference, grand poetical manner. For grand Sex. Love and Marriage
here do these hard hearts poetical actors, and played in fCameo-Moulin. 11 X"> takes a
■me from? Are kings of no mutters. Among the players classroom look at sexual inter-
nsequence? These a-re the are j r ,*ne Worth (Goneril). Susan course with the help of solemn
estions which obtrude. Engel (Regan». Jack MacGowran psychiatrists. jolly cartoons.
And if Paul Scofield as Lear (Fool), and Patrick Magee (Corn- plastic demonstrations and
empts to answer them within wall). AI! of tbem are capable reassurances that the size of
id I emphasise within) Mr of more than gibberish. None genitals have no bearing on the
nnk’s careful confines, they oF them (the author included) is gaiety of amorous relations,
•p through the shadows, the allowed to show it. Good for a giggle but do thrills.
capture ot cnca irora navan.
The w r °up claimed that the y^tij a flowering lotus on the -
pieces should not be sold wnth- e
Total for the jewel sale was
\% of Edu^Hon £97,832. Seymour paid £4,400
„ _ . .. • . for a jade necklace, and a pair
Mr W. A. Coleridge, the auc- 0 f emerald and diamond pen-
tioneer and a director of dant earrings fetched £5,800
Ghristies. said; “ Approaches by (Mathews),
various parties were received c ^.
bv Christies yesterday,, and we
have explained that the only “6091, a tu rnovei ‘this
e\ent of which Christies can
the MlSff for lart sLson, md
sale. nj m *° n re * tra,Mn * the £2,388,437 for 1968-1969.
”^No such injunction has been Dr ,^ e sa jS°Sed“£18 SmT" T nS
j™?- was So^ve £ n 8 iTthe T tf
peding fhls s.7e ‘sS^on? iS- "y TeoTie
citors have advised us- that they cL bb i P y ^ eorse
are aware of no reason why aLU
purchasers should, not acquire £8,271 for furniture
Eood title in the- normal ^ ■
manner” * At Bonhams, a picture sale
After yesterday’s peering of t °S 1 l e R d 9 l?’ 5 % a 53 < l pKvfS
Hove council, at whicbldiscussion
oF the sale was ruled out of a D p utch “arquetry bureau book-
order, Counrillor Cyril Fraser. rase -
chairman of the Library and coqa Atm oamet
Museum Committee said the sale X ~* V caiiiet..
was in accordance- with the At Harrods a two-day general
Public Libraries and Museums sale , commanded £11,381. Top
Act 1964, which allowed local price wa.s £280 (Franses) -for an
Good for a giggle but do thrills. I authorities to dispose of any 1 Agra carpet.
West Country
plan for
reservoirs
.DaStj Telegraph Reporter
rpwO reservoirs at Bick-'
leigh, near Plymouth,
and on Bodmin Moor,
Cornwall, are suggested in
a report by the Cornwall
River Authority.
A House of Commons commit-
tee has previously rejected a
plan to build a reservoir at Swin-
combe on Dartmoor following
objections by preservationists.
The River Authority says the
alternatives include a giant
reservoir at Lamelgate on Bod-
min Moor ttr serve Plymouth and
Cornwall aod the two smaller
schemes 'at Bickleigh and at
Colliford on Bodmin Moor.
The authority has asked for
public comment by Oct. 1 before
making a firm recommendation:
Outside park
The suggested Bickleigh reser- !
voir, in a deep valley between
Sbaugh Bridge and Plyra Bridge
on the River Plym, would be
capable of meeting Plymouth's
requirements of 20 million
gallons of water a day.
Colliford, south of the A50,
would yield the same amount of
water drawn from the River
Fowey.
Lamelgate would produce 50
minion gallons a day.
GRADUATION OF
RAF OFFICER
CADETS
Air Vice-Marshal J. F. Powell,
Director of RAF Educational
Services, was the reviewing
officer when officer cadets
'graduated at the Royal Air
Force Officer Cadet Training
Unit at Henlow, Beds- yesterday.
The Sword of Merit' was
awarded to Flying Officer ‘ D-
Sharpies. Flying Officer P.
O’Brennan won the BAC
Trophy and the Professional
Studies Prize was won by Flying
Officer S. S. Keen. Those who
‘graduated were:
Gnml. Dutln Brandi (Pftotiri; PK
Off G. C. B tackle (Irvine Royal Academy.
Aualiiir: GIa-oiim Unlvl: PH HIT R. I".
Comminq* iCarltun GS. 1 . Sheffield City
Cnllrnri: Ph Off G. Davi* iGHIinobam
GS>: Pit Off N. J. Grpr (Arcbbhhop
T-nlRnrr* CSC Fn Off P. A. Hewllt
(St Slaotien'a Coll. BaHa Balia. Rhodesia):
Pit Off B. C. Holding iWadr Deacon
CS. Lancs): Fa Off P. O 'Brennan
i Chichester BS for Boys): Pit Off D. A.
Richardson iStilpston-DD-Slour HS’: Pit
Off R. B. Russell (Duke of York's
SrhcK.I . Nalmhii: PH Off .A. A. Schimmrt
tSIcynfnn G5); Pit Off K. W. E. Smith
I'Platstow GS); Pit Off T. R. Walts
iJ rytin SHSI. General Duties Branch
iNaylgator): PH Off M. J. Setterfl^ Id
'Rrlga OS. Linen): nr Off R. B. Soflden
■ SI George's School. Hong Kona).
General Duties Branch (Air LoadmaMeri;
Fn Off S. Dennts (Bornesburp Secondary.
London). . ' General Doties Branch
• Ground); Pit Off P. Briaas MOimbetli
Collrm, Guernsey . Cl]: PH Off FI. E.
Geome (Khm Edward's School. WfHcy.
Surrey A Westminster Tech Coll): Fa
Off J. R. Morris (MowJev GS): Pit Off
A. F. Watts (The College. Wtdw-
Super-Marr).
Bnalneer Branch : Fa Off K. Coburn
(Pnirthne Serondaty); Fa Off J. W.
Caurchre (Vnckrnhunl C GS); To Off
K. F. Dnvkln (St John's Cnmp B. Sinan-
pore A Southampton Univl: Fa Off C. G.
de Fleury (King's Lvnn Tech Colli: Fa Off
F. Good (Northern . GS. Portsmouth *
Oilchestrr Coll of Fr Edit): Pit Off J. A.
Hood (Sunderland Pnlytort: Pit Off S. M.
Him hm (Bell's, GS. Coleford. Glos and
Wear Gloa Cnl nf Fr Edm: Fg Off S. S.
Keen (Derby Sch. Derby): Fp Off J. G.
King (Danfort! Tech ScW; Ea Off G. E.
Moorcroft (Ellergreoa ScW. Uwrpl A
NW Potytec. London): Fg Off K. Morfi-
Ttier (Bishop's Siortfon) Boys See. Bwh**:
Fa Off D. S. Nnelhrott fEstmourti GS.
Devon), Fa Off R. A. Pflarrm (Loogh-
Niro Cbtl ScW. Leins): Fa Off J. R.
Remolds (Wall-end GS): Fg Off P. E.
R-RMTM (Harrogate GS): Fg Off R- E.
Snarls (Famtaim GS>: Fa Off A. R.
Thnrpe tSpnldlna GS, Lines): Fa Off N.
Wiseman (Gataghnad GS for Bov* A
Sheffield Unlv): Fa Off T. R. WHpht
(Aid Smith BS. Nnneaton): Fg Off B.
Wynn-Hagtam fBargoed Tech Sch!. Glam).
Supply Brnucta: Fg Off A. G. Allen
iWeUfoaboro GS*: Pit Off R. C. Chaplin
i Boston GS. Linc»l: Fg Off F. D.
CiuuilngAam fCbeotiunt GS. Herts); Fg Off
A. J. Lawrence fHIndiley Wood GS. A
Klmwtnn-npan-Thnitie* Tech Sch). Srcrr-
in rial Branch: Pit Off S. P. Battler (Unt-
Coll Sch. Londom: Pit Off J. S. 'Hogan
(Dynevor GS. Glnra): Fo Off R. G.
Massey (Khyi GS- FMnts): Fg Off N.
NowrU (Lelqh GS. Lancsi- Pit Off
G. E. P. Pattendcn (St Joseph** Acad.
London). RAF Realment; PH Off J. J.
- W. OioulM (Devi/** GS. Wiles A Bath
Tech Coli; Fg Off D. Sharpies iShrrtnn
Sec. Lancaster. A Laocnafar A Mnrrrombr
Tech Sdn: Fa Off J. C. Style* (The
Strfnner* 5rftOnl. TunbHdwe W-lts. Kent).
Ed u red on Branch; Fa Off G. Bennett
(Ammanford Tech Sch): Fp Off C. R.
Newman (Ryde Sec. I of Wt A Cone*
Tcrti Schi: Fg Off J. W. Townsend
(Wallasey Sec. Cheshire A WaDasev Tech
college): Fn Off N. E. Walter (Saleslan
0*11. Farnborongh. Hantst. M«Uol
Becratuital Branch; Fg Off M. W. Fryer
fMnldstcw GS. Kent): Plt Off R. A.
Jones (Woolwich Polytech).
. The , Dtrily. Telegraph, Friday, Julg -3, t9Tl
Chichester Theatre
Charms of escapist
comedy of Vienna
By JOHN BARBER
A DIVERTING evening and a play of the
early 1930s is on offer at Chichester,
where “ Reunion in Vienna ” is being revived.
Older theatregoers will recall this as a vehicle
graced by the incomparable Lunts when we all
were very young.
Robert E. Sherwood’s
comedy, originally concocted
for New York, has all the
stigmata of a fashionably
escapist, trifle of its time.
It is about upper-class
people and is full of pretty
dresses, pat repartee, thrill-
ing ea trances and dashing
departures.
•It includes actorish set
speeches, gallant gestures and
cries of H Champagne for
everybody!” and, of course, it
is preoccupied with romantic
love.
And very nice, too, even if
Frith Banbury's production
does not quite hit off its self-
mocking . sophistication. Nor'
does it really suit Chichester's'
open stage: a proscenium arch
with theatrical crimson curtains
seems indispensable.
The scene is Vienna in 1930,
when a nostalgic party is given
for former aristocrats of the'
Hapsburg court — a gathering of
broken-down old gentry wbo,
for one night,- can. parade like
lords of creation.
The exciting visitor 'is the
exiled Prince of the old regime
and the exciting encounter is
the ' reunion with his former
loveiy mistress, now the wife
of a highly respectable psychia-
trist And of course, the ques*
b'on is, will they become lovers
again?
Nigel Patrick plays the swash-
buckling Prince, a ladies’ man
intoxicated with his own charm.
Margaret Leighton is the equi-
vocal lady who refuses to go
to the party and then arrives:
who kisses the ' Prince pas-
sionately and then says- No:
who discards her dress and
then runs away home, possibly
to see if he will pursue. As
he does.
. ★
A good deal of the . play’s
charm is invoked by the ironi-
cal playing of a large cast of
moth-eaten aristos and subser-
vient hirelings, with Beatrix
Lehmann conspicuously bril-
liant as the whimsical party-
giver. Rut, of course, every-
thin gs turps on the two central
performers.'
The queenly Miss Leighton
plays heroine with a somewhat
severe, .worried air. Yet this is
a feline coquette poising herself
deliriously between the claims
of two men, veering either way
in turn to keep us constantly in
amused suspense. This, at least,
was what Lynn Fontanne did
with the role, teasing us along
with what we used to call the
Lubitsch Touch.
For all her grace and beauty,
Miss Leigbton lacks lightness.
When Mr Patrick, conquers his
tendency to bluster he will be
excellent as the Prince.
V Reprinted from yesterday’s later
editions.
s FIDDLER’S FIRST
By Our New York Staff
A crowded bhuse Fo nearly
2,000 gave a standing ovation
to the cast- of “Fiddler
On The Roof" on Wednesday
night, when the show became
Broadway’s longest - running
musical with 2.845 perform-
ances. It opened on Sept. 22,
1964.
From
Yesterday’s
Later ; Editions
Among news reports which
appeared in later editions of,
The Daily Telegraph y esters
day were the following:
Faroe Islands
SHIPOWNERS and demonstra-
tors protesting about a plan
to dump 600 tons of chemical
waste off the Irish coast pre-
vented the Dutch ship Stella
Maris, 700 tons, from refuelling
at Thorshavn. Frogmen swam
out with protest banners raised
above the waves.
Smaller ships tried to stop the
Stella Maris mooring. When
she got near the quay nobody
would pick up the hawsers, so
she turned round and left port.
The skipper later radioed that
he bad only enough fuel to get
-back to Holland.
Belfast
\ SOLDIER and a young girl
were shot and wounded in
street fighting in the Falls Road
area. Several shots were fired
at troops.
A girl received a flesh wound
in the shoulder. The soldier,
from the Royal Green Jackets,
was wounded in the shoulder,
and admitted to hospital as a
“ walking casualty.” An Army
spokesman said it was under-
stood the. woman Was hit by a
■45 bullet, a type the British.
Army did not use.
London
PIGHTY THOUSAND hoiise-
holds in Greater London
will be asked from September, to
give details of income, methods
of travel and places of. work,
in a. £500.000 survey oF trans-
port designed to help plan road
and public transport develop-
ments for the end of the cen-
tury.
There will be roadside surveys
of private car journeys and of
goods movements, and surveys
of people in hotels and boarding
establishments.
Mr Donald Weald, Assistant
Director of Intelligence in the
Greater London Council depart-
ment of Planning and Transpor-
tation, said all information would
be confidential.
* * *
Sir John Waldron, Metro-
politan Police Commissioner, met
a deputation from the Inner
London Education Authority to
discuss wavs of protecting chil-
dren from attack, including
sexual attack, while at school.
Parents say there were 55
attacks in the London area in
the first three months of this
year.
Stockholm.
EHFTY Arab students aud
Swedish sympathisers occu-
pied the embassies of Egypt,
Saudi Arabia and Tunisia for
tbre hours in protest at the
“massacre” of Palestinian guer-
rillas in Jordan.
BUILDING SITLS & LAND
COUNTRYSIDE
MIDHURCT DISTRICT jn chang-
ing countnttld'- Li«nvd.
Ldfflf lawns. Gara t!; ci.'.’rth -
Swimming. Puttinp.etc. Soirth-
downs Hotel. Trotton. Peters-
field. Rogate SsS.
MHTVBiLiJ
(IMS
OLIVER'S ISLAND
St raml-o n-lhe-G reen
Propi'^.rls are Invited for thi?
d-vi hifimant rat thi- unique
h.iH U' re Itieig'^ jvl*nd. *i*
nil Ire irurii the \\ i Knd, in
a LOnuTvau.in «r. i. Any
development H 'ul.1 h ive I o ti-
nt •- vo-Dliun.il nr ri: mukinq
H pt'-ilrve distinri.ie enmn-
tiiiimn in in-- ri' • r scene.
An Himgiiwtlw ari Inlcctural
di-*tqn ul Ihe high. -I gnjllty
And cnnunq minimum later,
frrciwc w Ufi ntie ir.-»* and
nrfiuni! leiHUM-i would he
nccdw.iry in order obtain
planning pernu^tin.
Acet— b> l«oi only.. Na
-rrvlC'-* tti-ling on (bo ivland.
S.rtr of Itw (r.-fhu ■! will be
tnm.idt.-rFd. Eikimhf* nod
htr-^- Irtu-lj (■■ "• r * wi’b
nuprnvHl tu: Ttie Uir-rfar ol
Planning. F"Tl ol London
Aulhnnt,. P.O, _ Fiji’ M2.
Trinity S<|uapf. EC3P 3B\.
HOUSES TO LET
HOUSES FOR SALE
\ Large Selection of
SURREY & S.W. LONDON
FURNISHED PROPERTIES
TO LET FROM £14 P.W.
I MAYS
Properties urgently wanted.
Complete management
service for landlords.
Phone Any Other;
Ov-tiort 257T; Cobhum USI :
F-~hcr dST'JB; lVlmbledon
1^46) 6262. Weybndge
4 67 27: Wok ing 6J244.
SUBSTANTIAL . REGEN O’
FREEHOLD. iB ' Centra;
1 Brighton . clove (o -Royal
Pavilion -o liable office? «ub-
letthin nr de luxe family life.
■J2 mostly eoacionK rooms; 2
(.if. 3 bath, 4 ir.r.'t. 75
night »loraqe beaters, aticuu
4.400 vq. ri. EirHImt ron-
dltion Iodide. o«ncrs moving.
Ring 0273-64911. Flnextra
Lid— 17-1B. Grand Parade,
Brighton BNZ 3RF.
HOLIDAY ACCOMMODATION
CIHSI.EHURST, Kent. Pleasant
position. eft*T reach of London.
Srmi-dct. Huu*e. -■) bedrOLims,
l.mil-Liiird maintained garden,
lurnlsh-d. 1 J ear r.r loowr CJS
ner week Imluslve. LEVENS.
5 -j Chhleburyl Rcvart. LTiiJc-
hural. Kent. 01-467 £026
UN FU RN
LIMPS FIELD CO
ire selling 20
Centrally hrroter
ISHEO
MM ON. Coun-
mDu London.
. recently bulIJ
h
d
S
•>
llhrmmi. |5
nuble flurooc.
ii h pool . and
50 pw wee
JEW ART ■ KU
S8 1161.
eecptlon rooms.
1 acre garden
tennis court. —
k rsduslvr.— -
TZ * CO.. Ol-
Vf ANTED
n. The Forte- 1 : U"* aiwj
illinglog. S. Devon-
13.
F'ai. sleep S. t-5- ®
-.xelcr 550S7-
. LLE1 . Colt, mod cops
fine vrm. lire
£inu Sul ion. Bom- »«■
OVERSEAS
Snani-h Estate Aneni • -■ -.j- .
MenrhptH Avcn.ii. ^LlL.Ll'Tt'
iValenciai ' rraneai'lons
ihmunh Dank m Enal-v'^L — —
LAINL'R Y FLAT, Me"'"" *‘ K
sea. $rgl. is io 30. Sit to 6.
E33 p.w. AmerSham ssis-
FIATS AMD MAISONETTES
£1 p er l ine
FOR SALE
PRINCFS* r.ATL. sunny 3 bed-
room flat. S year-. £5,750-
584 20S7.
SIDMOUTH. DEVON Crtornian
>!,).• block oi laui. i\ ••■n.
ui i ir: 1 1 d and --nrireri -e't eon-
tuiiu-il (rate m gnml ptIoi'HI'iiI
aim approx I , ml. from tea ;
ir Individual q<i> Imd C.H
M-l-m-. Sni-eial allennon paid
in uiunri prunlliiq. Lnunnc. —
bill-, ^lt-■ t-B'h.. w.. W.t —
n^eixie. Glint fl. W"»h -mail
nilu- — 19. 975. I-l fl- —
£1 p ^OO. I e.l-ebi'ld S' 9 * *'
Griiioi’J mil £ , , D " T
(-11,. e^lATE VjIMF. GLL>
rone sireftt. ®ti>\iotn h.
A COMPREHENSIVE PRO-
PERTY ; MANAGEMENT
SERVICE ’offered io Laixflnrds
by long-ttriabl hired spccIalirW
altvaya .requiring (nrnl-hed
hiiuaet m Surrey. Snuth Lnn-
don. K-nt. (or eveciiUves nf
Inrernalirmal Companies and
diplomat »e personnel. Rent."
12-50 gas. p.w. lor 1.2.3
yr*r».
BUSINESS PROPOSITIONS
R£ AIHLRS are .nvmma’drJ io i kr arpnppruie praiimonal
t£dn£f before enreran t
WE .ARE SEEKING
AN INVESTOR
inlrrotrd In ecpandina a
Fiiiri-llcwL* Accredited Dairy
1 arming enlerprt-e. RWVW-
• hta inlere»l rale .'valj-ible.
£10.000 required. Nn -trinus
• iiMcm-rt. Only pennlne.* j in-
li re-led parUre need apwj-
\>ilU W. A. 20760. Dally
IrlegrapH. E.C.4.
businesses
ANT to live vo ■
■.(o'lC. fcoa side town
3 Irelacd’ Wc have
il freehold Antique
kr is. Crafi* and Tea
nth. nation lor iwte
. ae’f Tonfained flat
id '-urd a: ri-ur Tlti*
:n rbe puHure«ue
■jjhai ’in the lUJin
-<ird mad. It i- a
L*e and in
hmootnrat tmd w™
Hwut tdotS- Bt 8W
I £6,500- HJ 1 * *» att
km if n tor a SiS;
l 21911.--
FARMS, SMALLHOLDINGS
GENTLEMAN'S STOCK farm
60 Acres, modern charactrr
house. Consent for connne
Su rrey 'Sussex borders
WANTED
TOP FLIGHT RLP. rpqu'rra
noodfl. hmndPri unhanded. W ■
Cnuotrs
1 rcKir.ifn. L 1 -
vlti' icntij- h' Mr-Uerm ■:** Ciw .
Bu-il. « S'l'-ri'. BridlorJ. | — — — —
“.i. -ine *h£ L X., fre-m £.t { AU P
Ml PAIR
M-D'-mnjn r i;> Fiai.nmg
Scrvlm 2 Camiteq Terr»r-
B r idfi.r-J 8. TtTk*.. Bradlord
Ji-ril-.
j PMR wanred lor Dentist*
f.-miij. id Bavaria as soon m
pi i.cihle. P|ea»e write to llr
f; t hjurr. Den tor. Rah Reloh-
ciioall. Nr. Salzburg.
P Hampshire
. . Wiltshire -
Surrey
Somerset
U , i?2T heriraen Fjmtum and Fn-ntium tM.L-S. 2
mJlepi. Dot. nouse nf Indirldnal character in pletudaci wooded
tri UPfl. 4 toed*., bath., njtrpnca hifU. cloaks. . Kbucior-. diziino
"»•»„. , B«raor. ’i. acre Harden.. £14.500 Freehold.
Farnham Office tTrl. 52S3I.
5* OT ''P*V L k . v, Ll.AG E . Hamptiiirr-SHrrey Borders. Modern
fLgTSLnsSSR &\ SS2 SSK
^d b ^^Tmce A '.VS. flJ 5-,|^ v .' ccs - “ 9 ^ ea - «'“ S ° Freo -
STONE BUILT STABLE BLOCK attractive ty ,modemJMti —
. ^ ■■■_ MJuation Suney (Hants border. 3/4 bHtdei. . B reeep.,
Sfi and rabbled yard wlrfi garaoa.
£14.000 Jncbnld. Faraboeoagh Oihrr (Tel. HISS).
OVERSEAS
SCOTLAND
£a.O.OD FOR AN APARTMENT
IN SPAiLNI Fully Furnished.
Rio Verde A par [meal*, near
Marbella. 2 bedrooms with
7 twin bads, bathroom and bidet,
shower, bath., basin, w.c-,
lounge/ diner opening to sun
terrace with sea A mountain
view, kitchenette wilb Ameri-
can style bar. Numerous other
villas A flat* to £18.000. May
be purchased (a U.K. with
Sterling. VMta arranged. —
Contaet: W. D. Gough A
Partners Lid., 161, Oxford
Road. Reading, Berks. Tel.:
Redding- 55197.
SPAIN. Costa Blanca, overlook-.
Inn Med. Furnished luxarv
villa lor letting tavraunrai or
S rtvnle roddem.e. Si 4 beds..
lounges, 2 kitchens. 2 bath-
rooms, large garage, patio and
terrace. Room - for pool-
£8.000 o.u.o. Tel. 051-426
2779.
CONTRACTS & TENDERS
SEALED TENDERS are Invited
In duplicate by Chlrt Purchase
Officer, Eu, Purchase Oruan-
Isotion, To I warn Township. Dis-
trict Horiilarpur, Punjan
ilndla) for the tnDowIng:
lender No r208iBPO/56o97i
A-27B7. Dated 29-6-7!. Heavy
duty Rubber Tyred .Articulated
Dozcrv with Operating Weight
bring nr.t I<jji than 27.216
Sqs. powered by heavy duty
Diesel Engine of net 270 or
more Flvwhecl barau power and
rgulppcd with Hydraollcally
opemled straight Dozers with
tilling and lipping arrange men ta
and the required hydraulic con-
trol Units. Qnanlty Nos. 6.
The gurcha-iB u being financed
by I.B.Rro. Loan / World Bank.
Tender documents, *c.. relat-
ing io the above enquiry can
be obntined FREE DF COST.
Ipw * EH Branch. India
Simply Mission. Giivemmrnt
Building. Bromyard Avenur.
Anon. London. H .3. unilar
Reference No S-S096'7l i
VEH. Compleled au oran mm are
to bn returned direct to the
Beas Purchase Organisation,
Punjab ilndla). So at to reach
Uiem before 3 P-m. gn g.h
Sentembcr. 1971 . but not
6UPPLV Mlss,ON -
EXCHANGE
PROPERTY EXCHANGE. WbR
wood ed acreage with or with-
out cottage anywhere in South-
ern England and tor Lemdor-
Bat wanted in uchanga (w
property.
E* n d dotalla of property to
STUgE Thompson. P.O. Box
N.16SS. Nusad, Bahamas.
SHOPS AND OFFICES
FOR SALE. Duke Street . Rigby
Street. Si Helens. Latin. Slnole
■•orey freehold premises Un’.
able for ' guragei workshop)
warr house. Apprii.clmn;c area
8,000 sg ft. Al-o 2 storey
freehold oremitr* suitahle for
shap.'offlre 1‘41'iwrnnm. An-
K roxtmaie flrjor area 1.000 «q
■ Vendor wMI ecil wpcretely.
Apply Bo* No. A699 Lee *
Nightingale Lad.. Liverpool
Ll 6AZ.
IDEAL FOR PROFESSIONS.
Suite ot Self Coni alnt d Mull-
ein Offices. Beulngstoke Cen»r".
Recently decora-ad. Electric-
ally rc-wircd and fitted. Vary
-uttable for prounsslunal use
iSnlirlmn, Aecountant*. Ar-
cfiltu-Ul or would make , an
cic. fleni -urerry lor Unc'ur.
Deni L,t or ChlroP"d“<lS; Good
Dosiiiun near car pniks a '■■I
main >4ioppinfl : 5 “mcc* and
hi.- rnom. rlonkroom. w.i »
Main Senrl(«, Rent El.lOCt
S .a. ekclnfiive. Shari _*jr lnr.g
■am Iiviilliililr, mi" j
FOR FULI._DfT AILS APPLY
TO P ARNELL .1pRD> i *
HARVEY. d 1 14d OA WIN-
CH ESTER St-. BASING-
STOKE.
22 Tfj e Daily Telegraph, Friday. July , 31* 1
N71
Court and Social
Forthcoming
Marriages
Court
forular
the: Duke of Edinburgh left
Victoria Railway Station. Mau-
buckjnoham palace,
July 22.
The Queen, as’ Colonel in
Pl,ipf »jj; s evening honoured
with ' her presence the Regi- Chester, for Coiwyu Lay. ___ ^ a > _ __
mental Dance given by the Major Raodfe Cooke was jn Kosher, of Lytfaam, Lancashire.
Officers oF the Grenadier Guards attendance. • r Mr C J. Honrood and
ar the Uurlingham Club and was -.Hnr Maiestv was reoresented Miss S. &L liotraorke
Mr f E B. Peacock band
Miss M. L. 'Kosher
The engagement is announced
between Jonathan, only son of Mr
and Mrs R. B. Peacock, d>f La un-
ton. Oxfordshire, and • Mary
Louise, only daughter of J he iate
Mr C. S. Roshcr and of Mrs
John
Melville had the honour or Dejng t f, e officer Commanding the . Raith' which took place
received by the _ Queen this Regiment (Cal “D. W. Har- nunster Abbey . today. .
morning upon their retirement greaves). • ! '
from, the Diplomatic Service. Tfje Hon. Mary Morrison and
- Lady Wright and Lady Mel- x-f.cdr John Slater, JLN-. were
ville also had; the honour or j n attendance.
CLARENCE HOUSE, Jnly 22.
Queen Elizabeth the Queen
being received by Her Majesty., ‘“xhe Duke of Edinburgh ^°^5 r c .-L :W n a 5i„i, rc i , £^° , if£
TM Queen **-. .S aTthe Cenjn,, Sy Mujor &£& £EfiS &
...Cuvana and Mrs Chung- - Hon. the t Lord Provost (Sir Westminster A Doqy today.
The following had the honour Donald Liddle). . . •
of being invited:— the High Having visited Police Estab-
Commissioner for Jamaica and.. lishments .in Glasgow, his Royal
wood, of Harlow. Essex}, and
! ' - Susan, daughter of Mr and Mrs
' R. Licquorice. of Wisbech, Qaxribs.
MrL E M. Judd and
Miss K. M.
The engagement is ann
between Leslie, son of M
Mrs . H. A. Judd. of. Hodd
and Kathryn, eider d aught
Mr and Mrs S. J. Collett, ofl Bar-
rington's Bridge. Limerick.
Mr F. G. L Wright and
M iss C- An
The engagement U anno
between Ian. only son of Mr land
The Duke of Edinburgh, ac-
iSnSBKTte ffiihTess " fc^TST ’thT Stock %£^S?£S MreT'fl^WrigbL W, Castle EZ \
LaP> ' “ ^ — « »-»- i i 'W dens. Downview Avenue. BeffiasL !
Edinburgh . Co * es Week from August 1 to 7. am j Caroline, elder daugbterioF
51 oner for Guyana and Lady Exchange House.
CarLer. the Lord and Ladv .The Duke of
Garner. Sir Harold Boilers, the opened the Scottish Stock Ex-
Rt. Hon. George Thomson. MP change. unveiUed a commeniora-
and- Mrs Thomson; Mr W. S. live plaque and was entertained
Bates, Mr_ Ant&ahi_ Kershawy atJunchdoo. ■■ •
M P and Mrs Kershaw, Mr and His Royal' Highness this after-
Mrs David Powell, Miss Elsa nooo toured the new building
Mansell, -Lieut Gregory Gaskin, ' and later: left in an aircraft of
the Hon. Mary .Morrison (Lady the Queen's Flight from Glas-
in Waiting),- -Lt.-CoI. the Rt Hon. gow. Airport For Manchester.
Sir- Michael Adearce (Private The -Duke of Edinburgh was
Secretary), Brig. Geoffrey Hardy- received at Manchester Airport
Roberts (Master of the House- by H.M. • Lieutenant . for the
Mrs Richard Butler gave, birth Mr and Mrs D. K* Andrew, (28,
to a son in' London on July '18.
A memorial service for Lord
Constantine will be held today In
Westminster Abbey at noon.
A memorial service for the Fit
Rev. B. F. Simpson _wil| be held
on July 27 In Lincoln's lira Chapel
at 4.50 p.ra. - ■
Broadway, ' Bramhsll, Cheshire^
Mr S. J. Money and \
Miss M. P. Barton
The engagement is announced
between Stephen, son of Mr and
Mrs A. F. Money, Gravesend.
Kent. and . Marion. youoQer
daughter- of the late Mr Geoffrey
Barton and Mrs M. L. Barton.
Gravesend. Kent.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS
The Emperor of Ethiopia is
79 today. ■
President ■ Gustav Heinemann of
West Germany is 72.
Florence, Viscountess .Masse- . . ...
His Royal. Highness witnessed recne and Ferrari!. 98; Don Sal- A. O. Titford, oE Winch more Hilli
a display, of Award Scheme vador . dej/ Madariaga R5; ^ Sjr N.2I. - . 1
County Palatine , of - Lancaster
(the Lord Rhodes)' and the Lord'
Mayor of Manchester (Aid.
Douglas Edwards).
Mr A. P. Herbert and
Miss S. M. Titford!}
-The -engagement is announced
between Anthony, son of Mr anH
Mrs L. O. W. Herbert, nf Nrav
Barnet, Herts., and SheJaght
younger daughter -of Mr and.Mr£
hold), the Lord Plunket (Deputy
-Master of the Household) ,,a rid
.Lt.-Cdr. John. Slater, B-N.
tEquerry in Waiting). ■
Her Majesty was present this
afternoon at the Test Match
between England and India at
Lord's Cricket Ground. ■ Milne's Store, Deaosgate, and tj.
The Hon. Mary Morrison, Lt- subsequently attended a dinner i qUSIS vl i55h ensagement is announced !
Col. the Hon Sir M.rHn given hy the Manchester Naval 'a A te^too ® Mr a'e'd s? cS,"' o' "u
Cbartens and Lt.-Cdr. John Officers Association at Sams Mrs Elspeth Huxley R4; aod Mr ^ n._i __-l
Slater, R.N. were in .attendance. Chop House. Michael Foot, MP, .58.
Activities in Messrs. Keodal . Frederick Burrows 34j Mr. J E. Mr -D. J. Cox and
Greenwood $0; ^Gcn* .Sir .Ivor - jvns* S. Anderson-
LAMB
STILL
GOOD
IS
A
BUY
PERSONAL
Private £7 per line . Charity Appeals 75p per line. Trader-pert
WOE unto them that are wise jn
i hf. ir own and _ prudent _ ui
Iheir o»n s=i^ril_
J«.aiah V, 21.
Princess Anne leaving
. Heathrow. Ai rpprt yester-
day for Balmoral where
she is to continue her
convalescence .after her
recent operation.
By MARY MUNTON
TCNGUSH lamb continues
to be excellent and from
25p a lb for whole shoulders
and from 27p a lb for half
legs is economical. English
stewing Iamb was from ISp
a lb.
Other meat prices noted were
24p for shoulder of pork. 35p
for back and lop ribs of Scotch
beef and 48p for Scotch topside.
Scotch sirloin steak was 65p.
Chickens were from 59p for
oveu - ready birds weighing
51b 6oz. capons and ducklings
at 24p and turkeys at 25p. More
than one group is now offering
freshly-chilled chicken quarters
at 24p a lb and drum sticks at
36p.
Fish prices have varied little
in the week.
In salads, ens Mtuces were
generally 7 l ’P each. cuCTimbe_rs-
from I2p, English tomatoes 13p
and small onions a bunch..
Cclcrv was JOp a head, capsicums
18p a lb and aubergines 15p_' ;
More runner beans but fewer
broad beans wore available than
a week aao and in one group
bags of §t ring less beans were
lip for J2oz. Cauliflowers were,
from 3p each.
sas
oramed. — Ja — ■■■ 1 - -
D.B.t-. nUb»
WTSESiiS
cifv OF - ’vonK 'er 5 orW
OlebraUOfB J ul >. Day Re-
Ciy affrr •peciBl
aod
buuklna- a: Kuum Cro-s
B rautcT Lu teach Matte wKl a lira*
sssr:^ J¥*e u safciSrt4? D - - tp
Tclnnvl' . _
ROY DOTRICE
uu talkino ns BBC TV lar^ttuodir*
rmHufll -Ct-Dtrr woerc 300 MmL
5,;b9S7 ««>«■ M
Se watne** fcr ntm to normal
Even U vaa were. . noteie ; Us»
spare. Donaaom. , w tetfi . w ui
(Sji «knpjrieifla«>.
BUCSkS.
IVIDOWCD,
fldcrlj
dialikiL
juwHemmt her sm*)*, nenstooisY
mmlosflHRt. t»« wll t»oi in oo
London. W-l.
Daily
Forthcoming Marriages
Mr J. JVL Quick and
Miss . E. L. F. -Burton
The en^aaement is announced
between John, eldest son of Mr
and Mrs W. E. Quick, of Potters
Bar. Hertfordshire, and ERccn.
only daughter of The Worshipful
the Mayor and the Mayoress- of
the Royal Borough of New Wind-
sor. Alderman . add Mrs F.
Burton.
Mr J. A- West and
Miss F. N. Pedrick
The engagement is announced
between Flying Officer John
Anthony -West, only son of Mr
aod Mrs Donald West, of South
Wootton. King-'s Lynn. Norfolk,
and Fiona Mary, only daughter of
Mr and Mrs George F. Pedrick, of
Hatch End, Middlesex.
Mr A. J. B. Talbot and
Miss J. S. Walter
The engagement is announced
and the marriage will take place
Quietly in September between
Antony, youngest son of Major
Gen. and Mrs Dennis Talbot, of
Cast Court. Barham, and Jane,
younger daughter of Mr and Mrs
T. L. Walter, of Berkhamsted.
Mr A. Barr and.
Miss A. M. Fans h awe
The engagement is announced
between Arne, son of Mr and.
Mrs C. Barr, of Rock Lodge.
South Cliff, Whitley Bay. North-
umberland, and Althea, daughter
oF Commodore and Mrs Tom
Fan«bawe. of Freshwater House,
Stroud. Petersficld. Hampshire.
Mr J. K. Rudd and
Miss P. A. M. Tates
MrLP. Middleton and
Miss .J. It. Crawley
The .marriage will take place
tomorrow at St Mary's, The
Boltons, of Mr Eric Paul
Middleton, son of Mr and Mrs
H. H. MiddJcton, of Rugby, and
MisS Julia Rosemary Crawley,
daughter of- the late Mr George
Crawley, O B E. MM. and Mrs
Crawley, of London, S-W.5.
Mr EL L,. J. Vigar and
. Miss S. A. Sturdy
The engagement is announced
between Richard, son of the
Reverend and Mrs G. L. Vigar, of
48, Lee Road. Lincoln, and Susan,
only daughter of Mr and Mrs W
Sturdy, of 15, Greetwcll. Road.
Lincoln.!
St Brel ades, • Jersey, and Sandra. j
only daughter of Mr and Mrs
A. O. Anderson, of 11, Cumber-
land Avcoue. Blackpool.
Mr B. A. Bennett and
Miss M. A. Turner
WEDDING
Mr C. R. W. K. Inge and
Miss R. M, Paget
The marriage took place Yes-
terday in the Crypt Chapel. St
Paul's Cathedral, of Mr Chris-
topher Inge, son of Major and
1 Mrs Edward Inge, nl Brighhvcll
''Manor. Wallingford. Berkshire.
Peaches plentiful
More raspberries. loganberries
and currants have augmented the
strawberries. Australian apples
were generally l"o a lb. pears
lip ami there was an^ abund-
ance nf peaches From ’p each
for medium si y es. Grapefruit
from 19 '?p each, fivr
The cogaBement is announred j. and Mbs Rosemary PaacL
between Brian, elder son of Mr > daughter of Sir John and Lady
and Mrs L. A. Bennett, nf jPagcL of Haygrass House, Taun-
Mnrnen. Surrey, and Maureen. I ton. Somerset. The Dean of St
elder daughter of Mr and Mrs ^Paul's, the Very Rev. Martin
J. R. Turner, of Oxled. Surrey. vSnlltvan, officiated.
Mr J. P. G. Addison and
Miss P. M. Wbalicy
The engagement is announced
between John Peter Geoffrey,
second son of . Colonel G. A.
Addison, CB E. and Mrs Addison,
nf ' 26, Hflfside Grove, . London.
N.W.7, and Pamela Michcilc,
younger daughter of Captain G. R.
Wh alley, Royal Artillery, and Mrs
Whalley. of 5, Fargo Close, Lark-
hltl, Wiltshire.
Mr D. L. Roberts and
Miss S. M. Hemming
The enMageoient is. announced
between David Loteo. . mjti of
Professor and Mrs . Ai-JLhur Lolea
Fioberts, of Bratahope, Leeds, and
Susan Margaret, daughter of Air
and Mrs William Hemming, of
Mount View. Ealing. London.
W5.
Mr
Mr G. ft. Hall owes and
Miss V. N. Couzyn
The engagement is announced
and the marriage wRl take - place
in Johannesburg during August,
between George Richard, onlv
son of the late Lt Col and Mrs
■T. FL Ha llowes. of Co. 'Meath, and
.Co. Kildare, Ireland, add Veda
Nanette, daughter of Mr and Mrs
J. Couzyn. of 112. Sandler Road.
GlenhazeL Johannesburg.
A. J. Partridge and '
Miss C. R. A. Clegg
The. engagement --is announced
between Anthocv. son of Mr and
Mr G. R. Startup and
Miss V. G. H. Perrott
' The engagement is announced
between Geoffrey Robin, onlv son
of Mr G. W. Startup, of Walton-
on-Thames and the late Mrs
Startup, and Veronica Gwendoline
Hood, only daughter of Mr and
Mrs John Perrott, of Hampstead.
Mr D. S. Gilroy and
Miss J. M. Greenburgh
The engagement is announced
between David, son of Mr and
Mrs B. D. Gilroy, of Los
Lavaderos, El Sauzal. Tenerife,
Canary Islands. and Joan,
daughter of Mr and Mrs L.
Gveenburgh, of 58. Las Cuevas.
\ The bride, who was given awav
by her father, was attended bv
9usan Psget. Natasha and Isabella
LUndennis and David Parish. M»-
qhristopher Chapman was best
man.
LUNCHEON
Cook Society
jLord McFadrean was host at
.. jhincheon of the Cook Society
heSd at the Royal . Thames Yacht
Citpb yesterday. The guests
wc(-c:
'IT»f Hl»n Crvnml-»,tenrr fc*r An>lnli4.
n<-v»4-ral lor Non- South \Val«. 5>r .ronn
PattHn. Lord . OirTinittin. Lord Haytrr.
ukkiiEEu nuiuuuT. ouii UI jni auu v.. ui uu v—ucvfia. . n.irT till., t r n.n.ii
Mrs D. R. Partridge, of Ashley' Orotava, Tenerife. Canary Islands. ,V p r*.J.Mr c*mohoti ^aanif-'-a!
Green. Chesham. and Carolyn.
f ldcst daughter of Dr and Mrs
. L. Clegg, of Welwyn Garden
City. Herts.
Mr
Mr M. 1W. Lindner and
- Miss s; W. HosselJ
The engagement is announced
between Michael, - elder son of
Mr and Mrs P. M. Lindder, of
Clock .House, Broadway, and
Sarah, daughter of Mr and Mrs
J. J. Hossell, of Cowley House,
Broadway, Worcestershire.
Mr W. H. Stewart and
Miss A. M. Elba
The engagement is announced
■JL A: McGregor and
• - Miss JVJ. K. Hughes
The engagement is announced
between Andrew, only son of Mr
and Mrs D. McGregor. West Hill
Farm. Blackdown. Leamington
Spa, aod Maureen, elder daughter
of Mr and Mrs F. H. Hughes,
Manor Farm, Hook Norton.
Banbury.
Mr K. F. J. Gnerrier and
• Miss J. P. Croset
The engagement is announced
between Keith, only son of Mrs
S. Guerrier and the Idte Mr H.
Guerrier. or Guildford.' Surrey,
and Jane, second daughter of Mr
. As Mon. Shr XotfMrr Bnrtic>. Mr
nrnqil Clflrhr. Mr C. Cb^ipfn.>n. Mr Colin
Coltarae. Sir viiiino! Fn-naei. Mr
will Jam Fr»no r. Mr R. Fry. Mr Brt.in
Hrrr^on. Sir Edward Ha • mail. CpI Fir
Eric SI Johnston. Ft- Fraurjt Awn-
.Tni»^(. Sir Nnrmai* Kipo'ni. Mr 1. F.
Prldmui. Mr Ian Perry. Mr C. A. Phalp.
Sir Fticlurd Powell. Mr W. R Ruvcll.
C-.l Sir Hmrj Alirt SauMi. Mr R. ».
Fourtiry. Mr p. a. Sp«nonhr. Vf r
Dou^lhS SWld- »Pd Sir D. J. 9tillwr||.
oranges in a park for lop and
turn large lemons for fi l 2 p.
One group had English and
also Wel«h billin' at 3pp a lb
and Featured lo*» pp prices for
English cegs, large whites being
12p for six.
Other reductions noted hy 1 n
were prices of cooking oil. ice
cream. frozen fish fingers,
tomato juice and peanuts.
CLASS LIST
AT OXFORD
Sale. auiUbk Homo or FIM*. —
“Cl - 1 5776, ^ PaTly Tctograpti. E;C.4.
Trestle
5’,% LNCOME TAX PAID. - -
Stilus. Member BuilOiOjsociaUw Axbb,
Quern vjciorla Strcpl Builfluio
bbdsty. 1 ». KaUmHoa Street. Crcaidon.
Erl. 7886 . 01-686 53jJ. _
CORDON BLEU VOUCHER SET.
Knebworlli 5-95-
£10.
Heudbook
Alt VICE ON SUN CLUBS. — _
♦Op. Mrs D.. The Ndturljt Fouada-
lion. Orptnp tgd.
B UYTO W COLLEGE,
. X.TVn«?OOL. Reqd
LANCASHIRE.
HUYTON. NR
for Sspiemtu-r
FDVVEY. on. Hie. fw 6. SewT
NO pets- Tel. WTbUbM
STECK BtrwWir Grand Huo tar
44S19.-^6rtta M-157 b£
irtemapb. E.c.*.
for wiS'nji"
sum «p, 'jvS".
Be* ™SSL Ba- , -*A
«^asibirifflaab=j
18 yearn «hh e#nl ^aaertag 8 ,
Axed. 50 Fears experience,
name «— lie's done Jt-' SlSy ^
yuu lu di«uw « Injure my.
C«n»P»Py- — Write C.D.J5TO4.
1 elcqriDh. E.C.<-
TRANS L VTORS TEC1L iLondon)
sport dme. Phone, bmas, eajw—
15796. Pwilv Tfiegraph. E.C.4.
n,r 19717 a cnaltfled
Motreso to tench Bpeecb TnbUP9 and
Ora ran IhroushOUt Uie school w. cur-
riculum Mibjrm and as private Tuiaou.
Burnham *..-ale- Government superan-
nuatiun. Rwident or oon-rePMent.— -
Applies Lions wIUi testimonials and
names and addresses of referees to
the Headmistress. ‘
LOOKING FOK A
wall# _I ms i* be
L.F.S154. Sail:
COTTAGE in Corn-
able to heJO.— -Write
Tglraraph. E.C.A.
DENTISTS ADVISE O-DE-OENT for
Spntleesly Clean Dentures — Cham.
WANTED Unreni rurei E. Sussex a 14
bod pardon- Drt. casta 112/la.QpO. 74
MhrJbi .rough Dr.. Burners Hill PH
41543.
FRIDAY’S CHILD b Jovhtg end Hiring,
and Ironically tab bappinw depends
on whettaer aw ere losing and^ fli ylnp
tan. It casts CJ S « mriUoa to Reip the
‘ ctaHdrsn who nUU odor
Help its to help
. dkoaarioa .— Ck*W-
r-n's S-ydeiy. Rooms DTC. Hennlng-
■<>n. London. S.E.l 1 •
PBOF b^NIOrs AL LADY snk9. WflentlX.
j-nrali hoit.se Oxford amt» Ids Cera*
Ahhu- 54S.
gUMMBjG Ccwuvcs: Poptaart‘s 754 9UU8
FIMHHINC SCHOOL at SrtUo-, Grundi-
M?r twr yitla. aw tMJsbura. Austria.
BruuHfal lahesJdr location. winter
Ki'urts. -willi no. etc. Interna (loaai stu-
d-:ot body. Goethe Cartibcate courees.
Detail* I'rom: Enalnh Office. Scblapr
GrundWcf. Imbartsorne Lane. J&nst
Grlnsteart. Sitseex.
ALL WHO HAVE HELD COMMISSIONS
In the Arm rd
trngnlar or tumDoreryl _
Furce*. and tbeir wives or widows,
are elinlhle to use KING EDWARD
Virn HOSPITAL FOR OFFICERS
(Sister Audik’H, Beanraont St., W.l.
Wo appeal lor donati-ms and leaaclr*
to hrlp n* memcnin Uir low
of this wtallw hoapiai.
Faroes
PRIVATE COLLECTOR will oivS £10
ritrh for ”■ Medical Travel or Cook-
rrr “ bnnk. Pte 1850. DeCniis to P.C.
455B. »aPy Tctenraph. E.C.4.
MAROUEES. awnlmn and ail banquet-
lira rqu.pmi.iTt. Phone John Anderson
Hire U-Uirjdyc 33651.
'1 be lollo'.vmg clrfn* list bus been
ihsuea at Uxtoid:
.MOOLICS HttaTOII l AND
MODERN LAMitACtS
CutTk ■ — \. I. J. Cape (Hail, CCC
aii-i \jnpi"'orUi • nil: (. . D. H. Jom.6
ifri. J-~ and Hnmplun G5.
Llavv II — It. .M. LI Baric U (llali.
Unn. and \mplrlc* r lli: II D. P. Br-icy
iu'-iiiii, Rri.l and Urndinr Call: N. P.
lCi. ni'oi i -Err. J--. an-i .Vlahern: Man
A. M. Uai-Hjn ih'rt. SI Hilda', and Wv-
lumlii- Aijbn t>: J. S U.-urdcu iFu, Nr-v
end hum: J. A, O.ir-.in i Rossi. Hrrll.
ami Bc.lloril S: It. ■ S . Grant Trm
and Prise"* S. Feriliani: lF.J R- VV. j,
Hariile ihri, Line anil *>faerborne S; T. B.
DINNER
Mr R. H. L Peter and
Miss K. L. Fin] tips
The cagagemcot is annonneed
between Richard Hugh Linton,
only son of Mr and Mrs K. G.
- - Peter, of Pencrof t. Launceston,
The engagement is announced Cornwall, and Rosalind Louise, .nuictly In Hampshire on August (lersfield. Yorkshire,
between Jonathan, ouly son of the younger daughter of Dr and Mrs 14, between William Hartley; son Mr fl. A. D. Freeman and
kte Mr and Mrs H. G._Rudd. and G. J. PbiHips, oF Manor Heath, of- the late Mr and Mrs A J. H. “
Manor Brow. Keswick. Cumber- . Stewart, and Alison Mary, younger ”'
land, formerly of Prestwich. Man- daughter of the late Mr and- Mrs
Chester.
The
FletcHi
and the -marriage will take place and Mrs P. J. F. Croset. of Hud-
Patience, younger daughter nr Mr
and Mrs H- W. Yates, of St
Lawrence Avenue, Worthing.
In Memoriam
F. F; Ellis. Their fntufp address
is Havelock House, Wckharu,
Hants.
Mr A. K. Meadows and
Mias P. M. Smart
The., engagement is announced
betw.een .Anthony Kenneth, only
Lord Reitb Pamela Countess of Lytton
The Queen was represented by A memorial service for Pamela
the Earl of Wemyss and March Countess oF Lytton was .held yes-
at the memorial service for Lord . lerday in the. Queens Chapel. St sun of Mrs D. Dey.ereux and s tep-
ReiUj which was held yesterday James’s. The : Bishop of London, son of Mr H. W. - Devereux. of
m Westminster Abbey. Queen Dean of the Chapels Roval, offi- ' Lindfield, Sussex and , Philippa
Eiiaabelh the Queen -Mother was crated with Canon J.-S. D. ManscI, Mary, youngest daughter of Dr
represented by Major Sir Ralph Sub-Dean, and the Rev. 'J: F. M. and Mrs J. A. H. Smprt. of Bar-
Anslruther. The Archbishop of Llewellyn. ••—Baroness’ Spencer-, combe. Sussex '
Canterbury was present. The Churchill waj .present,
Mayor and Lady Mayoress The congregation also included:
WDss S. W. Wass
The ennagemcni is anoauat a 4
between Richard, second son of
Mr and -Mrs Denys Freeman, of
Cbiddidgfold, Surrey, and Sarah,
second daughter of Mr and Mrs
Reginald Wass. of Bexhifl. Sussex
•owyers and H etchers
Companies
Masters of the Bowwrs and
lers Companies. Col N.
Irelamd-Smith and Mr J. H. Pace,
presided at a dinner or the
Bowycrs and Fletchers Companies
held test night at the Founders
Hail. B.C.4. when members of ihe
Courtsi of Assistance of both
comnwrties celebrated their 600th
annivoijsary.
Ht-alry (In. Ball and Higbgate : M. J.
G.>r>* (Frl. Irln Mud 31 Mary’s GS.
Sirtmp: B IJ. Mi'OiKj- (Fri. >Tagd aiul
H'.nn.-iJr. \t. IJ. R. Morrison ifri. CCC
ai»\ iGi R. D. isowmia iGcrmi.
I ' an.l Irani S: i_. J. E. Rickclt iFri,
•i.-ll .inti Eton: R. K. 5att<>rtl]wailc I hr),
.mil knilili’lxrln: It. \V. ^cnlt ihr>.
FOEMS PUBUmED (IP 3uli»ble» in oew
liont- bound volume. Send poems.
lor live opinion and details £1150 cash
award* and terrm. London Literary
Erfulnnw. 29, Avenue Cham Mrs. Vt-r-
non Place. LoDd'm. W.C.] .
TKROlvreOStS; — . BCHrt
CORONARV
dhf«K that kIU»- Often attacking Ihe
inane. Costly research into heart
Klx-rfvw h hrlnlOB lo i-ave lives. Wv
need your help. — Dept D.T.. The
BrilHh Heart Foundation. 57. Gtou-
crutr Place. London. W.l. i
CONSULTING ROOM IS I attached to
small flat xninbc by Laid Gervaph for
lilfl. personal im Crmind Boor. B«K-
ment| fcnti Boor. Muu be good jiddteys.
principal* onlv contain Lonl Garvaah.
12A. Eaton So.. S.W.l. 01-745 939T-.
HAPPY ROME FOR ELDERLY_,fll 5
p.w. Inti, — Tel. Folkestonr 535961
Uiie-nT* and Boolham s. York: <Ji Ann-
Cock* (llnlj. Si
TODAY’S EVENTS
Prior ry*. Mexoodni op wu Vlrtorie Line
vxtensloo, 11.13: alirnds Rn)n: int.
Hor*e Show, Empire Pool. 6.50.
Qurfi*’*
Guard Mounlinp. Hor-^e
Gwrta. II: Guard .Mounting, Buck-
ilac —
tnoham • Palace. 1 1 .30.
Njlursl History Museum: 1
petl.cr*. 3.
Theatres. Clncuw.-.— rPepa ai.
>ORT CHESS
. By Obr Chess Correspondent
In thje open charauionshio at
the Southport chess congress B.
Cley (Rjfherhaml. alter a short
draw with M. J. Conroy t Burn-
ley ». ret uoed the lead with eight
points alter Ipti round*. J. Wnl-
stentmlme (Manchester! is ia
second iplaco with seven a ad a
half
«.*. Sumeo Cock* tlMlj. Si .Anna and
•.■-•i\.ni of ihr p.irrrd H.*ar> W'i.|*ii(i!|l|a.ii:
'll Ana F. liiuiup-M.n iFri L.V1H and
Ti.nhHrt'iv GS: 'Fl Man-.- Caroline yan
ilrn IW— -h (Fri. IMH and Lyo-e Francus
dr P.nurUi’*: I. . J. Wkkliam illal.i, Mrw
■nit >mptcforUi: R. J. Willh «Frt* Ch.CH,
an. i Eton: R. p. H Wmils Uluvil, New
and '..Mm Grange GS.
Clm*J- 111 U. A. MrNab iGerml. Or
Olid ILinm* S: A. I". Clalry l>r/, Herlf
anil kino-- S. C«nlvri»nry: N. S. Patter-
rirn UIiimj. Unl» and whupitt S: isj
T. Ij. Sarkvillc •Spani. Uoc ami Eton:
iF» Sarah . 1 . St »in**rt iFn St -knne
and si Leonard*- iWn > fir Id S.
iFt initk-nieH c-mdld-ne adjudged worthy
or inrlion in rrdloapnl n*( or French
««.■' Indlcflln i -in. I .date adjudned worthy
vl riwliniitvii |n euMvauial u.-e gf German
ill I'Mt.rala. omlMjlr. a-lluilgrri worthy
vf Hi J'niliOP m colloquial u*r of lUhan
I SI |nd» nlr* rnnrllrj.il.- adjudged
wurdiy Ml di.imctina in lulloaulol u,e
ol bprtni-jh.
FHSr.NANCT TESTING.
2797. Nanrlng inciliUe
£1. 01-602
EjYEAI A COLONIC UUUGATION
PutTidn Vr B l. S.BJi. 01-672 40'
V X
ANY DISCARDED CLOTHING. We
si wan. make pood u-v at used dor
Men’s and chlUem** especially
cane. West London Miwlon Qa
Centre. 84. CaltJonina Road. Lot
N.I. (Tel. TER. 9905).
SKIERS ENJOY ^ NEXT
Lradlm West E0d Ski Finn
lUrecuVe glrb antler SO-
good r{
liOd. pleamim NlMOIlibi. kmnri
---- - - sod
of and «kf morta
irrably t-ome enienrace ot dealing
the pQblfc. ro Jest nlei team, t
salon and l«a ski ^ holiday. .
g tv art Henderson 01-629 8S84 r
LABRADOR 3. Wacfc. 3 Miches. I
S wenfas old. Now avsritetrfe. CIO 1
Godnltnlap 32909.
WALLPAPERS A VYMt
G. Thornncld Lid.,
ALL 1.C.I, .
uidf puce. ..
Peutoavtno Road. N.I. 01-857 2",
POETRY WANTED tor co-operetiTa bt
Excellent terms. Send noun* lor
lor’s comment*. Regency PRESS i
45. Wm .OnM St- London. IV ■«
IMPERIAL CANCER RESEARCH FL
One vl the bast ways at auppor
the nigem work of this Incites
search organisation ts hy riaait
under Deed of Covenant whrr-
1 cope tax ebb be recovered h-
Foilt. nouc help turn, Dtou.O
IBS. I CRT. p.o. Bcrx 1 33. L-nrO
Inn Fields. London. WC2A 5P\-
OXPAM IS HELPING THE BLIND .
8 EE* Catarnci-bllodsBi-i u come i
in part* of Africa. £” has paid i
a simple operation that enables <
blind man io — and to fend
himself. Surely tills Is money v
spent. Please setsd a donauai
axiom. Di-pt. 40. 074, Sent*
Road. Oxford.
PRIVACY J3Y TIME OF SICKXESS
man _and '
women of ail opea, ana
to afford high naming borne fen
asailxbfe at the Ftoramec MohUnp
XcooHal. ParUixilnr* of admission »
the hospital’s work are obcorna
from: 5ecreliiry, 19, LLfaOn Grt"
London, N.W.l.
IXE-ON-SOLEVr. unexpectedly araflaJ
lumlenUsaif holiday cottage. Sleeps
£1 July .to 14 AuS- — 35..P-W*
Oenfurr. tPl. Wefbimge 4471B.
i.'iN
H.APPV HOME £15 p.w. mcl. two heap
ilia
fill locations. Public spirited penot
Write for detafhr Volnntery Berei
Housing. 1, Warrior Sq. Terrace.
Leonardi-oo-!
-Sea.
CHARMING BED/S1I1TNG ROOM f
Lad}. fTnf in alenant lxjndon~Stre«
Private baibrnt.. bkfst. L.H.. C.H.W
tot. £3-50 aijihtly Wntt CJI.1379.'
Dally Telegraph. E-C.4-
RELIABLE COUPLE remjlre caretsldji
job Aim. Phone iveuonf nr. Rugby on
LPl'bMBBB.
ok for
OXFORD SfRElpR. Girl wai rter?
n resident cook for 30 in DragO
School House. Oxford 37a44-
CARAV.NN £50. roadworthy. Essex. Td
135 5828. .
POODLE 6 month-) old .wants COontn
home- 725 5838.
3P*i.-10B”i Prnfl yearly on investment
»jf £100 to £S. 0 D 0 out of Investm ui
Ircliniqucs and. principles well o rd
sad teslrd. — Delalts from D. I oy
Lavrrv. Drpl. TO. 10. Madge II Hm
n. Lancs.
C I -i y f ran -I"-- Da If. Bl-c'r burn.
KUMIKO Mtamago add Bnth^— 754 79|3 .
GLANCE.
MORNING SUITS
DINNER SUITS
SURPLUS to Hire Dept. For Ba la. Bar-
•joins from £12. LiPM-VN’S HIRE DCP1
57. Oxford SI.. W-l- 01-457 5711.
BRITAIN AT A GLANCE. Ru^J-.
Mslraric house?. National Porte. |uc
flMt.Y Tsmimra TonrLt Map I of
Gr'-at Bntaiu. uOlo. r 40in. cooltlns
iiilrarma'ion to help you plan a Holi-
day. Scale I2'» miles to the licit,
rnce 25 p tliruuSta bookaellrci bad
ne\r*sgeau. nr «rnd 25i« fF.O.I or
cta’^aei. to Tire Daila TglehIfh.
■B. 135.
Drpl. C
E.C-4.
UNIVERSITY NEWS
post
of Westminster attended and the
Prime Minister was represented
bv Mr Christopher Cbat«fvvay.
M P.
The service was condncted by
the Dean of Westminster, the
Vei v Hcv. Eric S. Abbott, assisted
by the Precentor, the Rev. Rennie
Simpson, and the Sacrist.' the
Rev. Christopher Hildyard. The
Rev. Murray Leishrmm fsnn-in-
Wwl and Mr Charles Curran.
Direcinr-Generar nf the British
B*"oadcasttng Comoratirmr rend
the Icssans- and the address was
given by the Moderator nf the
General Assembly nF the Church
of Scotland, the Rt Rpv. Andrew
Herron. The ... Arrhriearon - oF
Lord ,md Lady -Goohoid aorl tfJc Hran
Chnwrapluv W favlhouae. MP.. and Lad
Da*!iM tvouduauav . <Mx>»-<ti-iaiv am
dmurtiliYM, tec Hon. David and .Mk
L yt'mi CobboM.. Hrnpy LyKon Cobbdd
tec Hon. Mi* Rowland CobboM. the Hon
Mra ChrlbX^ks-r RIoual. CMWci
and. Cahvrioe Blount. Mrf Herbert Araar
Th.' Dowan<*r Vlocounteps Haatfalndeu.
Aw Vt-ronoton Wavrrlcy. Ladv Terrtnn-
l«L JLady. Gladwyn. the Hlati Sheriff nt
the County nl Hertford and Mrs Jnrrm.
Ibooi-pn. Ixxdy EUzataetli Bymi. ten Bon.
Si Maurice and Lady, nridamnan, th*»
Hod. Dovhu U'onlhmiw, l he Hon. JuKan
Bynp. Ihr Hon. IsoV-l Cotto. itoo- Hran.
”-s Srallft, Lady Weaftl. L-rdy lArilm-.
rnrat-. Mr . John .Ponr. W.r.. .Lady
Ti-narrton. Mr* It. W. (HiH'tonl, Mr Vlcirv
Moafwin. Mr aod--Mr«-;jntnT Wan. Mr
anil Mr* Colin FfM-hev Adam. Vfr, Jark
Hambro. Mr H- R._ Wtlkirpon- Mr
Mirha-l PoLtnil on# Mr T. Holloway.
1 Lady Tailyonr
Ad imral of — the ---Fleet Earl
Westminster, the Vert. Edward Mo un that ten nf Burma -was
{gSffSftTi T>r J -/ . Fra ^ r ' ' represented by ' Major A. J.
McCluskcy, were present m the ~ - -- -
■sanrtuary.
The BBC Symphnnv Orchofitra.
conducind bv Sir Adrian Boult,
the BBC Chorus, conducted bv
Mr Alan Melville, and the VYrst-
iTj n f!i Cr n ho!p ; “Qrfurtcd lllo . uwu .
»k r Douglas Goast, took part congregation included:
in the service. The large congre-
gation Included:
Donald. Royal ' Marines at the
memorial service ' for Ladv
Tailyour at. Cbelsea OM Church
yesterday. Tbc Rev.. P. Edwards
officiated with the Rev. D. L.
Peyton Jones and the Rev, C. E.
Leiahton Thomson. The large
Grit. Sir Norman Tadvour rtiitternkn.
Muriel. Lady krun iwdDWl. Lnrri
and Latly Rr|m i*on and dan«bli>r-lu-
iM'vt rtn- Him. Mr* Murray Lelteman
tdaunbirri, and Mark, torn and Martha
" ':li|i ‘ '
Lchhinan i<jra n deft lid ram.
L/ird llill nl L’rtun. Chairman of
Cover non of Htr BOC, Lady Plowden,
\ T-.r-Ch.-nmiiin. nnmr Mnrj liii-'ii.
r.uvuruor. Mr Hum Whrlrlnn. Mananinp , , ..
Uirrrlnr. T«drvra|nnr Mr Inn Trwtiowun:" —
Mdn.iuiiiii Ltlrccipr. Radio, mil, nlbrr
Dirrnura: tbc Doivaacr Marrtiinni-«s ni
' Wmiliralrr. ten Eail and Count*-- ■■ nf
briklrk. fcart and Counlr* 1 ruitD.
R"ar- \dml E4rl Cmrn*.. rrori*~7Hlrnn the
Fftltmiinorra' Cinnuanj and Grr-h.im'-i
tartioul. Vl^ounl RaiKIUMU raf Uoal'iid.
Vlvrraunt ■ Hvd, Vki-mnu- Or L’T-I*:.
V.C.. Sir Jk-vnour 0|.'rlnn and Sir
David r.Mni Kevan. rcrarornttno Plmcnl*
AaouraiK* 1 ON. Ilia BMiup 'of Chester.
Lonl blanip. Emd. Lady Burnham. Lady
Clark. Bnronev* Elliot of Harsvnnd.
Catherine Lady Kun-wond, Lord Howick.
Cl Glendali- and Sir William Rendcil.
reoT'->Livfn<i Cnniiin>neviuil'i| Divrion-
mi.-m Corporation. Lord Fcrrli-r. Lord
Balrrno Barwo*., Sfi.eks. Lady Nnnrun.
Lord and L«dr Sinclair, Lord and Lady
Fraser of Lmadilr. Lord Oydnuiuir,
Lonl and Lmb Monin.
. Lady Thcoiiasta Cadogan. Cdr Sir Allan
Noble. I.r-Col Sir Michael Arteanr. Ihe
Han Ruivland Wjpn the Him Mrs
J. C. Ilutrmvlck. the Hun. VIvnkK
Rime Sir Ceorji- Bull Lad.v Dfingla.-
H.imf Mr Hilary Sen 11 Sir .Inhn Mw*r-
oun. Sir William and LmVv Hildn-d. Luily
Nlchnlls. Sir CHIford Drive. Sir John .
.I.imes Sir rradijjie Osborn, Sir [tohert
LoHJ. .Sir Rkhard and -Lady - Turnbull.
Sir Will la m Arni'.tpjnp. Permanent Secre-
tary. Civil Service Dipt.. 5>r Itimnld
Gould- Deputy Chairman. IrnteoaDdpDt
TelrvhJnn Aulhurilv. Sir Rnkrfl IW-Ilinfler
reprr*eaiinra me Mon r%cellenr Order nf
_ ,u*ihtcr-l*i-limt. Mr aid Hr* David
WHH-imv-tVyim inon-ln-law sad daualHrr).
Major and Mr* laa Wtdv l brother -m-law
and uvrri. Major aatl Mia I. s. Traltyour.
Ll-Col and Mr* V\ . G. TkHyour. Mr and
Mr, W. P H. Tallynur. Oaot. and Mr*
It. S. ThityrM*.
Cm. Sir Campbell and Lndv Hardy.
Gen. *Br Peter and LhcOv H*Hllnfl*>. Lady
IWI-Nwhin.- LmIv- Gny. Lad* Drover.
Lad* Rlrhev, MaJni^Grn. Air Robert
N'-vlile. Prime and Prince*- Inirrctlmkr,
R-.ar- Aon' \L MrMulk-tl. Rear- vlmt F.
It '** vn e-N Mi rill-. VJaJnr-Gw. - P- W.
M-wfnc. Majir-Gen. and Mr* R. \.
Pnd. Mejur.C.rn. and Mr* F. N. Grant.
and . Mra I. 5. Harrfenn.
Mali*. Geo.- Knrk M*4 Majur-G.cn.
and Me W. 1 D. M. Riebrara. tooeteer
with oteer rrtativra am* Irtroda.
the _R[itlyh Frnplre. Sir Nnel Avhto1dlr»r
SIP Harold Riihvn, Lf-Gen. Sir inn
Sir GbTdlrt RWKlle. Sir Undvtv WiKhw-
tsn. S-ir.Fifc Clark. Central office of in-
foemdllon. Sir Grolfrey ETey. fprrycnlln!?
RrUtiih Oxyncri Co., imd Lady Eley. Sir
Andrew Ifcenn. renrrvmrinv umveeily nf
Stealhelwie. **4r Cmiy* Ho peym aii. O C..
reerrsrnli'in lInivenii T nf Gla*nni«' Cluh.
Lady iHa;ll| Nimlls ' Lndv I Rrrr-ffirrii
Cldrk Ariml Sir Frank T»w. GcnHenna
U«lirr nl Up* mark Rod. Ijiriy ihiuir. *?|r
Oven War-hritinih- Jones. Ijtii* Kaililcley.
Si* TTioiro and Laily Rorivrin. Mo
MrUPl Ifaniwy.
Thn Oran rat Lincoln. Prof. W. J.
repre«n;ino Free iTinrdi ■■(
Mr Inia To Wiata
A memorial service for Mr Tnia
Te Wiatar Was held at St Martin-
in-the-FicMs yeatertkiy. The Rev.
Austen Williia ms officiated, assis-
ted by the Dean of St Paul’s, the
Very Rev. Martin Snllivan. The
lesson was read by Sir Denis
Blundell. High Commissioner for
New Zealand, and the tribute was
pgid-br Mr A. T. Campbell.
The Royal Opera princinals and
chorus, conducted hy Mr John
Matheson. sang “The Chorus of
the Priests” from the “Magic.
Flute." by Mo /art. The “ Great
W.illy.” company, conducted by
Mr John McCarthy, sang “The
Di'riTs Prayer,” and a Maori choir
sang- Am E-ltm TiroHia (Jcsu,
lover nf my
C/mi-ron.
SERVICE DINNER ■
Royal Navy dob of J785 and 1*83
Tbr Royal Navy Club nf 17R5
aud 1.7R5 eoferta inert O’e mem-
ber/; of" the Artmiraltv Board at
dinner lost night at thr Con
frtE: ftT - naught Rooms. Ariml Sir Michael
----- . .. _ pollock presided and the. guests
• of the evening were Lord Car-
rington. Mr Peter • Kirk. M P,
Vire-Admi G. F. A. Trewbv. Mr
Fr»e HlDiTti Federal Council, the R*r*:
Jtehu W. Si oP. rvprrseotlnfl Crown Court
Qurrti ui Si-Dtliind. Mr D. G.- C.
L*wrcnrr UnJer-SwrcUrv. Ministry et
PciiSa Kin] TclBtWumuDlcatiaaa. Mr W. R.
57" Slrnubenyee. M P. Parliamentary
unipi4rcrrt«n> of Slate. Dept. nl
W- U . r " lc, J? Srienec. Mr A. P. Brown.
PurnMN.. thn prtx.11,1 and F.-n*«*..
B. W. Lythall and Mr S. Redman.
rurviwi ana n-iiom,
TiSSS;; Cbltei*. Oxford. Can'. R. C.
rearwortiiB tee
Kettll GranviT
r-nrr.-Jf, Mr Aettn oranvillr.
wani.'"??"" J*-?. \C- Mr LCaH* Llttln-
ras’lBT S*X(1. Mr *>l Brosi-
"*M rraranniPd Whuvtora Gander.
n’lH.nw. cnrtniii^' IJ' Umrerv|r> nf
DEAUVILLE BRIDGE
?*1ran' Bnr-au- iTnSSSjWi THvrnmrnunl-
irar a a
s"“-va a ^PsJs-.~saa: «5
e.;,n, r.llte« -nd T*Jjga3SmJ?
- Jonathan Can«»ino and Robert
Fheeman, of Britain, inrrmsen
thrir lead to IS points Deau-
ville yesterday on thp- fiFtb nay
of the week-lnng Deauville tour-
nament nr bridge champions.
They beai France’* Paul Chemla
'and Danicle Leclcry 11-L
Trumpet Call
:w
E, the undersigned; are
convinced that the addi-
tion of " fhe"_ United'
Kingdom, Norway,- Denmarlc and
Ireland to. the European Econo-
mic Community would 'serve the
cause of democracy, world. peace .
‘and economic advance in the'
developed- and - developing
countries, and, above all, tbc
interests of the British, people.”
This resounding statement
come wifi it the intensive “ broiler-
hotel.”. where, tourists wflj be
housed .and fed in smali cells.
Physical ladiustments by Ihe
Procrustes! technique will be used
where ncctssary to reduce them
to uniform size.
Sentimentalists may protest at
cruelly in Jihc scientific tourist-
farming industry. But the
realistic pcbplc in Ihr industry
know that| an ever-increasing
supply of cl^cap tourists is esveo-
tijl if w-p a^rc to go on raising
their standard of living.
At Exeter College. Oxford, Dr
D. J. Bradley (Cambridge!. Tropical
fie.«cdicli FpIJow of the Royal
Society, has been elected to a
Senior Merfic.nl Research Fellow-
sHiir from Orlnbcr.
# At. Wad ham Collese Ratu
Knmisrsp M rt ia. formerly Com-
moner nf the rnllege," Prime
Minister of Fiji, has been elected
to an honorary Fellowship.
NORTHANTS AND HUNTS
MASONS
By Our Masonic Correspondent
_ . imports From the menial gutters
from the European Movement of America which arc beginning
appeared in the Times ycsler- to flourish and pullulate in Eng- Trrafirvra^ Fri-
day. At least the signatories, land. irrationatt Outburst
whose names follow ia alpha-
betical order.. are_not quite, the
same as those who usually (even
monotonously) -appear- in such
portentous declarations.
Is there any reason why l he
guy. should not became a stock-
broker and join a commune?
The communes, hipirie colonics,
or whatever you tfke to call
W HEN j Lt. Col. Gerald
Hayfbernthwaitc. chair-
man oi the Standing Com-
mittee on National Parks, says
the Government is ignoring its
They include a television an- t^cra. arc essentially parasitic responsibilityf For the^proiecliun
t & >7 An tho ramtaucf evclnvn v t - _v:i - i « »
nouncer, Michael Aspel: the
Duke of Bedford; Anthony
Blond. London’s swingingest
publisher: Denis Compton:
Henry • Cooper the boxer and
Jilly Cooper the journalist; Ted
Dexter and Lord George-Brown:
Jack Hawkins: Trevor Howard
on the capitalist system and
exist only by virtue of its agree-
able tolerance.
Why shouldn't those who
operate that system share, if
they wish, in some oF its morn
of the national parks he is
making a vni-y mild statement
of the obvious.
The national parks are imw
turcalencd frvl almost every cou-
Mr R. A. Pnlmcr. IVnuty Prn-
vinriaj Grand MasTrr .sin re IWo.
was installed b> Lari Cadogan,
Pro Giand Manlcr nf Hie United
Grand Lnrlsi 1 «if England, tlte
12th Frovinci.il Grand Muster for
NorlhnnLs ami Hurls -inn? the
juovinrr i\:re fmipid in 77SS. The
instMlInlinn took nl.n i* nt a sperial
meeting of thr Provincial Grand
Lodge at Northampton vesterdav.
Mr Palmer .stirrceds l lie late Mr
Crrh-nm Gnilhiumr. who held the
office for nine years. He installed
Mr D. ft. Baker a« hi*: Deputy
Provincial Grand Master and con-
firmed the officers appointed in
May.
At .m earlier p-renninv Lord
Cadogan laid thr Foundation stone
of a new Masonic hall at St
George’s Avenue. Northampton.
latest Wills
and Sir Julian Huxley: Arthur supplement and fun-rcyolulion-
iw) w i7*ii. in *»mr wr jts morn reivahln L ; n H lr , ’ , : ;
exotic fantasies and pleasant inal drvei-
sclf-indultjenccs? Ax colour f (thc cvamplcs are
Kocstler. Jim Laker and Hay ley
Mills: Eric Mo recam be (but
where is Wise? : Alary Quant;
Sir Alec Rose; Sir John Rothcn-
stcin: 0. T. Snow and Jack
Solomons; the Bishop of South-
wark, Peter Ustinov and Wood-
row Wyatt.
To imagine these people all
in the ?a me room together
ary news-sheet merge in deca-
dence. they can drop out and
drop in at one and the same
time.
More! More!
plauj lo prospect lor minerals
in North Wales and the Lake
District). I
It is true that some pinjccts,
usually minor (ones, hare been
slopped, or mure likely, post-
poned. Rut if «he vested inter-
ests behind the proieefs are
ANTHONY MIL WARD, powerful enough they invariably
U the new chairman of the go through: I here is an atomic
London Tourist Board, has power station iln North Wales
some fresh ideas for cutting the and gigantic p^Ush works on
arouses rite same Feeling, of cost of staying in London hotels the Yorksh irp ftfnurc «> ht lo
But many
are missin
Jagger? Nobby
evoeded n?m»*s
type.’
r -Where is Mick i_ * «!?“?* Thc tourist
bbv stS Tornmv h ?- cI I 1 !? future, whose sole
"Y obicct will be to pack in as manv
c °tx ■: assra-s; saartis zss
and Doris Waters? Why are
there no jockeys iborse or disc)
in the list, or swimmers, or
cooks, or bus inspectnrs. or
representatives of a hundred
mate more and more closely not
so mudi.tr> the school dormitory
an equally ohvi
irrational ' and r
burst,” says Mr
the Minister rnrjLocal Gnvern-
ment and Devefhpmcnl. The
i;nvtronnienl Orparl merit, he
is reply* “An
pjcrjtcd nuL-
ir.ih.uu naac.
ABBOTT. H.. St Hr-trire. Lan- Nr-r
C*-*hlre ‘rtn tv £17.2n9» £11.484
ADAMS. H. Havlinz loUinf
irtntv rin.t;n - 1 R .409
DCNT. C. J.. Btirlcv. Hsmn-
*-hlri* irtul r C29,7ri i 73,1(17
FRIXMAN. .1., Bnvr>nif>e
irtnlv CI2.m» 73.283
LA.C'CLI.ES. InrtV. wifr. nr Sir
Alan I..v«r«!llr», Krn^inzlcm
‘riutv 43.377
ORR. D. J. w_ Wont worth
i a niv rro.oriii. h>7.52p
517, AS. Mi*» I.. Krn«lngton
•dulv 73.332
SIMONS. Mr* I). H.. Mnswrll
H»l >«luiy £lffjnr,i 50.7S5
SWANZY. F. H.. Barhiun. Kent
• duiv Eifi.nri7» si
SA'NGE, Mi-=* v. M . Hnvlte ’ "
mrai «• i (tun- £ZU*??1 ji .mi i
WEST. R. T Li.t.lh .duty
Eini.ftim ._ 13 eSAAVT
WHITT Hit. i., c. H., Maida
V.< If rrfnli £W.J7<«. . „ _ f*rR-,
WIA.CTT, Acne*. SouLh Cad-
W'-,. S‘»mcrsijt irtutv
WITHERnEM. NHlir. Ch'r'i<t- 1
cttUri-h. Harnp-'hire idutv
Fleet Street. LonVun .
A GOOD CELLO OR
Cramt. InutiHirrtal. Te
nr wrlig .\c 1 5458-
■Uy TclegraJ ItC
DE LEON Drama Srtmmer School. 49th
hid mow. 457 4877. 935
COMMON MARKET. Sine Hie Fl.
w»hw Jolrafnra unless rha vntrrs.
i ■•■united. Write for a Rrtitiua Ft»m
lu tee ’National Common Mir
Pcrillraa Coamrd. 7Je. Iverno Cb
London. W8 6 ru.
FB'nCZKRS. 14 iu .
I
llcemienlogi — ^Ilf^45 40*1
fan-
ATTR M. i rVK W.3 central heated
4th pin. Own small bedroom. £55
month I raj. 7 J7 £818.
D.MLJJ TELEGRAre OVERSEAS Sl/B-
9CRU>nON RATES «*raiiBljV«
reoMPSt lo Suteertptinn DrpL. _
Trlrp'eph. 133. Fleet Street. Lone
F..C.4. »Ord<-rs (or one lS^ue
■seek n/cp(*ii.i
rk'l
art.
flol
ner
_ orl
rtaiTy
Ion.
per
FRIDGES. New I nnn rfcct
p rectors Irom £45.
from fiCSTTaO
1-743 40491
CUNfCARJE FREG NANCY TESTING.
Clinlcare 'T). *4, Firrrny Srauare.
Londo n. W.l. Tel. 0 1-588 STOP.
PICTURES by Archibald Hiorburn and
Geurnc LoiIbt -santnl loi perrastient
exhibition n f their work opening 197- -
John .Scmtbern. Prnminint. Ltbkcaxd.
John _
Cornwall.
DobwetK 373.
MICROSCOPES, old; secondhan d., el l ae-
. -crsMjrKa. slides, waniad by.ctrttertur.—
M.S. 15703.. Daily Teiesraph. E-C.4-
BA LLAMAS. Double . budding . n’at . fnr
' aale ptiralcly ^Fall jiaMCTlars B.0.
15750 ■ Pelly Tricqrapta.
4.
. Tam.- parasols. areeUng c»4j iVtr-
lorlent. *c.. rqd . privateL*^-— W'nie
P.C. 151 53. Dell* Telegraph. E.C.4.
LIFE AFTER THUS ONE? far
yoarseil. Brochure. College of Pucbic
Stariira- 16. Pneembanr nnee. S.W.l.
til -589 5392/5.
MISS LOTUS 5 / MASSAGE open a>
usual while exterior of to. a. Pell Mali
belne redecorated.— 950 0145,
COMA Overland. £78. lOBl Ocl. & 9lb
Jan.— Butterfield. SUlUngttra. YORK.
PICTURE MAP OF LONDON straws a
Ihe pril
prinrfpBl olscrs nf interest perks
bridges, hotels, enunm*. Ac. m fnl
colour 55(n. x 37ln. Suitable Tor well
rtrsplaj'. 2op P.o. or cbeaae -by nest
29rai 'row Deni. L.M.. Tire DAtLV
Tcleoilvpk. 153. Fleet Street. Lon*
C.
don. E-C.4.
GALLERY REQUIRED lor brct Louden
exhibition of receni ns loti nras by Antonia
ttHkinanca. — Writ* or piiane R. C.
Simon. Bratton Rouse. Farley HiD.
Reading. Phone Evervley U549.
C'.
IE6AL NO TICES
iS.TMp HIGH COURT Of-JpjT
L-H.USCLRY firVISIOM
CO.WP.ANlbS COUIW- — IN
THE. \I\nta OF LEAPLLX .
MWFXLD oud IN THE MAT-
I'll OF rnt COMP.VNILS
AI.I 1P4F. NOTICE IS 1IER6-
hi blVLN IbnL a PctiUun lor
HI* nindiiiq up of Ilie strove
u^nrrj Crampany by the Htflb
Cuutl of ju.licr wh- on Hie
mill day Julj J97I ore-
»te»SAj to the vud Court bra
M.**h & Murrell UnUted of
t».lS Hvnnctia 5trc.*t Caveat
Ljardra Loiidun MCJ, And
thai rbe »*lil Petulon is
■trr>:eteil lo be heard before
In* Cpur> sitUoii _ at uje
Royal Courts r*f Jn'stkT 'rm the
ober 1971 and
41 h day nl OctoS
any •Ji-rthra- cr ■ untnbutary ui
iTi r said Lompany rieslrraiv to
suppinl or opoose Hi* muking
*»l an i?nlcr nn Uir yard Pcti-
*r* nja» appr.ar at the limn
pi hr-iuie id dukii or tl ho
Lrannei t*ir mar pnrpiwr: ,iim
• run-* m Ihe Petition will be
tanu-ncri bv »J»e tnidenigoert
t* ;•*» ewiiiinr nr coniribvlurv
* nr '*"1 Company requiring
Mirh *j>m m |M»m.-nt ot Uie
rr’Hiij*i-*| iXunfr l*ir Ihr JUnif .
AflSBl'Q A CO— 35
SpHIInnijrt'ra SReei. Lr,udon
6C3I *JU. Snlklius to Ihe
Petuiranrr. NOTE; Any ner-
-rao » In mtoJidv to aonenr ran
Uie hcanrtra ,»f the said Petition
m»i vra, on nr vend by post
ni ihe atmvr.opmed. nnrVr in
wrllrrara « hr* utlcntina wo lo
™. Th - Nmjen mint Male Ihe
name and address of Uie per-
®r. it a hrm. the name
and rdilr*** nr ter hrm and
nnisi b'. -l-iraod by thr raencm
nr l>nn. nr he. -or their Svbi i-
irar III any. anil muit be
s*nro. n. nosli.il. must he
hj p<bl hi -.iifScienL time
ilte. nboir. named not
nVKV in the
rllcrmnn ,,f i Ue 2nd iltry of
Ocbilnte 135 1.
ARTICLES FOR SALE
£18.1171
*?;.»! i
Obiiuortj
as lo fiip barracks or even Ihe savs snnlhinalv, as cmilinually
concenlratinn comp. MilUarr protecting the ntilional pjrks
discipline, even i error, will b'c heritage.
oilier occupations wbow views ncccssen' to cnsiirc Ihe effirirnt Bui this is noli a mallpr nf
would Have equal weight? processing and movement of tlic ** beritnge w or -fenvironmeat "
Drop
tourist material.
.The final rationalisation win
r£ are really aiming at
the people who are not
1 T sure whether to drop in
or out: the guy trying to make
irp his mind whether to become
a stockbroker or . join a com-
mune. . .. --We intend lo become
the Simdny Times of the [real:
Pres*.” says Mr Kevin Hp-mif-
ton. News Editor of Ink, one of
the organs of the ■ “ Under-
ground Press." another of those
or even of "national narks" at
all. These arc ail ‘bits oF com-
fortable jargon used consciously
or unconsciously to obfuscate
the real issue. •
The real issue is this: shall
•** economic growth.?* " pro>t>Rr-
ji.v." "organised^ greed."
“ Mammon.” or whatever you
like lo cnll il. be t$ie ullirnale
arbiler of what halations to our
country and ourselws?
CoiiNuncr. Lady Krougitolunr.
At UfUrr-iimhe Xursiug Home,
■V 'jrtvhury, l>;k*ihirr p ^sed
widow n\ first Lord
r>roushbhaiir, Con«(»rva(ive ^1 P
for Kensington South, 1915- 15,
wlium she married .re hi^ ^mnd
'V Ifi-I 1 . rtiul who died in
sin: wrts daughlri- of Maim-
Charles
Guard:*.
MarrioiL tilli
Major
Di-dguun
GRF*yT SUSUlElt SALE, rtera -
‘'teran* £2-40 jd. mcl. tell
and hiii nra. Vfry hea\j lV\Ut>n
" l 1 ’?- fe,t
suipra. Ucaty (adiaa white
lIlRlliniilf *rat*>trr* 1 '• v 9 rsn
:%• he s
’ KAR. fri*r Mima.
Iin*i -.vilhnm rahli-mtian. l>^rM
L-n l’an l hiwii l.id.. 413 .
hV?*.' noT w,t ’ 01 .bis
PUBLIC HOTKTES
CTVrL AIRCRAFT
ACCIDENT—
. INSPECTOR'S
INVESTIGATION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN.
Reraulaifoo IO 1 I 1 of
Li
pureuuu to
“* Cfvn Aviation Upvesti gallon
nf Accidental ReguUtlviw 1989.
that ah Inspector'!* Iflve»tl9dUPil
S? 1 .-- RejulaUona - a
v»Mna place into uje dreum-
eUiKu and Carnes- of the aeddaot
Wbrnh occurred on 13tb Juris
4?nJn ri F ddftch. Worm, to
C03LVNCH E G-ATA E
r?9!*,‘crtd In tee namr nt —
ALPHA ECHO GROUP.”
'ny wraorts who drain lu
make rtprucnutioiii u Ui Lb a
citt’jrn-.fipr^j or cjtisei nf ihp
1?ft7‘c2S!r , !!w5i«. , a. "EL 1 .?*
Jojhe Ctaier. inspect or in Accid-
oob. Aintnh ImryUjiaUun
DSBarainmt ot Trade
Branrtf .
SSLJP-VS u i,heU . Huto-r.
, i- ra i' a .^ 1VC2. n 1 1 ill u
1 hc Of Ibis' notice
"v csSSioi?" 01 ' “• ref6renc “
isyf 1 * - Ulis Mfd tlt * ,,f
TRAYS.
ROL'fND VOYAGES by tail rl.t-
nrge shin; Brail 4/5 weeks
r Ingle onrt double • cabins with
ffi” 1
. — .abrns with
l.muflttea ^cg^Q'EMo
aL» to Canada. U.S.A-. Vv.
— DpMt. Rhona
S airru.*. LTD.
■rrrworaiBl Co. r „ g|l(
U6-9371! Jtf47. Teles 74!sS!
It
WKT l«Dt£s holiday. Econ nlr
WEST
LOAMS
7 ABLE TENNIS T MILES. IJ.IT
i-iu'ildr. in, m £19 23. «irr.
Irt- 0*1 J 5304 iHanlssi.
^TRUsTLTD^g
New BonVa;.
gini in 11 hi m 11 nt n uiiiiiii! 1
| TODAY'S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS I
Aiwrin ; PA, f5
Ait Galleriei v?
F,,r Saa — -
Rcridence
U
Buiidins S »h*s- & Land j|
Faranuiuni Chief Siivcriu Malfcr,
OF, ShurUrtnd Islantfs rrjri of
Brit»R Snlninon Islands Prolcc*
Peter pimple
toratc. aged Fig. Son horn last
marriage. Silverm Hatmo. Ifi.
apjfominH new Tdraiuouat Chief.
Michael humogyi. [ n St Louis
Missouri, aged 8«. loternstionallv
k nmvn hioclicmist rt n«i diahi-tes
rtscarr hpr.
Edgar James March. At Cok
tveh, i 5 |e of Wight, tfavdj hi.--
tonan: .Yssocidte. Koval Institu*
i* , w n ..- J*' Architect*: author:
Brrl ish Dffstrov CIS ; a Hislory
fl >T 11
g.'MPtre.c* For Strip ji
Burmese Prupofithure .. 11
Umti’PciB & Tenders io
r.n ici'i a 1 n men li if
b?.h:biUutu "
I jriiiii Smallholding^ ' fi
Hills & Maisonettes ]j
Holid rtv Act-wnmudation 1 1
Page
11
H
II
12
12
Hotels & Resorts
Houses For Sale
Houses To Let .
Legal Notices .....
j-'MOS a
■jffiaal Aooointments e
Oocra & BaUet ®
Personal ij
Public Nolir.ts ira
Shops & Offices ... ji
Situation 5 Viicaai a a ran
M, 22. 25 *34
Si tuatjans Wanted ... “■»
Theatres, Cinemas, *c'"l 27
Trevc? 12
of Dev eloprnenL IS93-19o5.’'
T Telephone:
To place an advertisement;
vencra f Classified enquiries:
Birmingham Office:
01-353 2060
01-583 3939
02 J -455 9292
mniiniDniHniHiis
8
; >50#? v - . • v-:-.
r*c ■ '•
e '^%
m
g**
*f»v>.
Hie Daily Telegraph. Friday. July S3. 1971 X3
mmmsm
iwMlk ■ ■
i ■ />■ •■
-rc ? and mustard jumpsuit- by
Marucclli with lashings of sable round
chucked hem. Lean body, dip
fastenings typical of collection.
*; v
Replacing the summer blaxcr in the Antondli manner: neat black
mess jacket lleft) ends sharply at the waist topping full-pleated
tartan dress. From Galitzine: solid colour in a green tour-gore
skirt and black jacket, worn with mannish black -striped red shirt.
News for evening: satin
jackets over matt fabrics.
By Galitxine. this is
rod over black vcfvot.
Pleats, all over Rome, were shown by Mila Schoen in wine skirt
(left) with matching seven-eighths wrap coat, matching fox trim.
Right: Valentino’s olive green cardigan, chalk-striped, with camel
Oxford bags, tailored shirt of camel silk with olive rectangles.
Passion for plaid seems strong all over for
this autumn— —here is Laug't coat In • it, with
that baffling above-knee length the Italians
have surprised us with in the collections.'
HOME killed the hippie look and went highly civilised
„ ! cek f- b, 3 couture collections.
man tn8£L? cowel -) ark < jackets were sharply
man tailored. Day dresses , lean, handsomely detailed.
neU \ But the trouscr suits riot Plaid
t^?f ? atlcrn s * or y and the Ptains are flannel.
By night, taffeta is revived and there is a lot of satin.
tr, ,n nSPERALLOOK; Far sleeker , so women will have
to work at better grooming to match the olive-emerald
green look , fresh with or without red. Camel and Grey
are the strong neutrals. The rest is black, not brown
C OULD the neat little
mess jacket replace
the blazer as winter’s
classic?
I doubt it, but Rome
seems to think so. Ending
smartly at the waist, it
poses problems for the less
than willowy. Yet. it looked
fresh and young at
ANTONELLI.
Wide • revered mess
jackets in black topped
tartan dresses with black
pussy bows at the throat,
their skirts pleated full on
the bias. And they all
ended 2in or 5in above the
knee.
pie girls with their
bright red lips. • narrow
eyebrows, full curly hair,
wore black brigand hats
and seamed black nylons.
Believe it or not, the
look was neither Thirties
nor Forties — just flirty and
immensely commercial.
For Antonelii has taken
the weirdness out of the
Forties feeling that Young
London loves, and showed
eminently wearable flared
jigger coats in bird’s eye
tweed with matching
Oxford bags. There were
sashed three-quarter coats
in camel over blecft
trousers, always cuffed.
With this outfit, always 1 a
vest, knit or fabric, in
draughtboard pattern.
Astonishing prints on
black or sapphire silk ay
night riveted the eye — like
Vasarely paintings with
curious three-dimensional
cubes stacked on one
another, sometimes form-
ing bands of bright colour
across one area of a plain
dress.
Shaped long and slender
with ~U-necks and with
floppy cardigans in the
same silk, they will make
all the plunge neckline
brigade look old fashioned.
So will __ the stunning
printed crepe evening suits,
jackets mess-cut like the
daytime ones, with only
one button, at the waist.
E Brave, tough and deter-
mined, the glamorous
Frincess GALITZINE made
her entire collection in
rod. emerald green and
black, 'and scissored' it
sharply.
It was a collection of
tough chic, and I hope only
the prettiest of women buy
it.
She showed lots oi capes,
lots of crisply-tailored suits
with new-looking one-
button jackets winnowing
the waist.
Her contribution to the
great suit comeback
strong all over Rome:
jackets in plain wool
jersey with patterned
skirts.
One was in jacquard
wool, bouncing little red
and green rectangles on a
black ground, a coat was
in very Irish-looking bright
green tweed.
Otherwise daytime out-
fits were solid in colour,
almost aggressive; for ex-
ample: a green four-gore
skirt, black jacket, mannish
red shirt pinstriped in
black.
Black suede shoes get
bright green or red calf
heels. The tights are black
and sheer and do marvel-
lous things for the leg.
Jewellery’s never been
less important at Galitzine
but the square buttons,
black enamel ones framed
in silver, have charm.
Pin-striped long satin
shirtwaisters by night keep
that competent career-girl
look going. Satin was big
I;.
It-'s exciting. It's different.
It's Eucryi White Tooth Powder
Gets your teet+i whiter,
mouth fresher. Try a tin.
Just for fun. ^
■a7 •
c; i r.s plaitoom or nursery.
cJneSwre keeps all the children's
pa-cnhsrnslia Unit above .only
r= « t o. pyr eclogue reveals alii
i r r-'vrrhn Huai Lcndcn, IIM
and drinking
out of doors
Sli page booklet— nedj h 6(J
iccipes Covers ail aspects
fiom picnics to barbecues,
camp fire cooking elr
ISp (by post 1 Sp)
from Dept. O.D., Sunday Telegraph,
Fleet Street, London, E.C.4.
THE HIPPIE ERA ENDS,
AS ROME REVIVES THE SUIT
Sketches, Beryl Hartland
news again and looks glow-
ing at Galitzine in contrast
to chic little calf waist-
coats — black-speckled on
white or green — which top
bias-skirted dresses jusi
covering the knee.
B VALENTINO, too is
besotted with the. George
Sand look, giving it his own
flavour by trimming his
apparently endless trouser
suits with a floppy velvet
bow tie speared with a new
signature broch: a bunch
of grapes in cream marble.
He gives his George Sand
a devilish dashing
musketeer's hat. with
turned-back brim sprouting
a jumbo-sized pheasant's
feather, and be stripes her
olive green jacket.
Trousers, often camel with
this green, are Oxford bags,
deeply cuffed.
The shirt is topped by
his favourite vest-shape;
the high-heeled shoes are
one colour but two
leathers.
His jackets have extra-
wide revers or none at
all, and are either cropped
at the waist or dip right
down. His palette is black,
camel, grey, white and
ruby red plus that olive.
He showed almost no day
dresses or even suits. By
night it was black char-
neuse battle jackets over
floaty black chiffons,
pleated or bias whirling,
raid-knee or floor-length.
B At CAPUCCI we moved
to the medieval court
Valentino's full George Sand
look: grey lambswool trouser
suit with ivory silk shirt, pull-
over mixing grey with camel
diamonds, camel cape and vast
Feather-trimmed hat. From hia
ready-to-wear range. Picture:
Paul Armiger.
“T ET the Family Plan-
ning Association
come into the
High Street between
Woolworth's and the
supermarket,” says Dr
Ivan Clout, a G P from
Crawley and one of the
forthright speakers at this
week’s F P A conference
in London. “ There are
hundreds of men and
women who just don’t
know where to find a
clinic and, when they do,
the chances are it’s only
open every other Thurs-
day night”
But despite the proved
need for many more clinics
there are still some people
who wouldn't go anyway —
although they want 'help
badly. They are the
families over-burdened by
a large number of children,
living in over-crowded con-
ditions — what Sir Keith
scene with long slim wrap-
over coats, pure as sculp-
ture and butte rsoft page-
boy (that is. mini) dresses
of wool muslin-, all belted
with plaited silk and wool.
A tunic and trouser out-
fit, dazzlingly well cut. had
inserts of mustard down
channel seams of a paler
yellow suit.
■ MELA SCHOEN’S cqlour
spectrum is so sad (wine
with oavy blue) it’s hard to
raise a cheer for what was
in fact, the best-tailored
collection in town.
Mila takes the vest
every girl in the Western
world is wearing and beads
it ail over in wine and
navy diamonds with a slice
of green; over a wine crftpe
shirt and pleated skirt it
is a look that would even
gain approval on King’s
Road.
Her sculpted jackets
have usually just two but-
tons and do all the right
things for your figure.
The skirts are pleated—
either box- or kilt-style.
With them yon wear a
blouse with bold horizontal
deckchair stripes.
am
it: ••
ha- iW:- ■
js : m ' ■ m
fe- -‘S
* : H
I-***
Mila loves these hori-
zontal stripes. She uses
them on jersey coats and
cardigans and vertically
for evenings on taffeta
blazers.
■ LAUG’S beautiful collec-
tion is full of day dresses
which recall the great days
of English couture.
That means no Mickey
Mouse appliques, no
flouncy Burne-Jones shoul-
der ripples, no sashes pull-
ing an. otherwise, shape-
less dress into shape It
does mean the sinewy
cut of a sunshine yellow
wool dress with high
square neck, long sleeves,
an orange suede belt and '
the sort of painstaking de-
tails- that drive the young
to -seek beautifully-made
clothes in antique markets.
A collar like a pair oE
floppy spaniel’s ears is his
signature this season, start-
ing the show on a caramel
and grey plaid wrap coat
Many coats are hooded,
nearly all are sashed, but
the one that may spring
the. surprise was the tot-
ally square coat (red and
green tartan) buttoning np
to the heck, and with
squared shoulders. We all
bad one once.
Small berets cover all '
hair, as they do at-Scboen
and ForqueL
Lang gives plaid a new
air in gossamer Lurex, in .
dresses ' kilt - pleated In
fresh grass greens and
sapphires. For me his
clothes are the most wear-
able in town.
■ The classic look is
strongest at FORQUET,
where the models aLmost
slither their, way about in
narrow skirts 3 in below
tbe knee. Jackets are long
and sharply indented, the
• best a two-button-dosing
one in pale grey. Heads
are bird-neat in skull caps.
It all looks chic and sen-
. sational: it seems right in
tbe direction fashion is
going. And yet, isn’t this
what Courreges and Quant
were liberating us from
long ago ?
Check on check, plaid on
plaid, that is Forquefs pat-
. tern. story, with giant pat-
tern on the coat echoed,
smaller, on the suits. With
his plaids. Forquet does
some dashing things: like
framing the armholes of a
sleeveless coat in thick
wool braid or pleating the
bodice back of a belted
three-quarters jacket.
■ At CAJtOSA designer
Angelo Tarlazzi, from
ribby handknit cardigans
and tartan skirts, gradu-
ates in a beautiful new
collection to good Donegal
coat dresses with flying
scarves, narrow black
belts. The long- jacketed
blajek suits with pleated
skirts look sleek, as does
■my favourite in the col-
lection,' a slender grey
worsted wra plover coat
with inset waistband-belt
flipping over.
Plaid showed more
through the Carosa show
than any other, with lots of
dash in huge sharp revers,
raglari shoulders, spinning
skirts.
■ GCJCCI trying hard (and
not before time) for a
J 'ounger, sprigbtller image,
avished fox all round
classical suede coats.
Best new look: tbe.
ribbed velvety suede rather
like a super de luxe coi^
duroy and beautifully used
in a high-waisted terra-
cotta coat, softly flared
with • matching trousers.
Lining, as usual, matched
the slim cream print shirt,
very horsey.
■ MARUCELLI bad ex-
actly one idea but handled
it superbly. The shape: a
narrow-sculpted one-piece
bloomer suit, its legs puffed
full from' a mid-calf elastic
band, a snugly comfortable
all-in-one. By day in choco-
late or navy, wool with
officer neck and three
enamel dip 'fastenings; in
black crepe by night, some:'
times creeping down to
the ankle.
ADVERTISEMENT
These Are NOT
DIAMONDS
But You'll Swear
They Are!
Incredible space-age • break-
through! Fabulous Diagems.
new man-made stones, so blaz-
ing! y perfect that only experts
can tell them from genuine
diamonds lor sura 1 . . . So
beautiful even pawnbrokers and
jewellers are often fooled, so
' flawless that few genuine dia-
monds can match their blazing
perfection . . and ' for less
than 1/12 the cost I
THE ONLY DIFFERENCE
Genuine diamonds are pro-
duced under tremendous heat
So are Diagems 1 Genuine dia-
monds have a cubic molecular ,
structure. So do Diagems I Gen-
uine Diamonds have a Sre and
brilliance measured by the re-
fractory scale as 2-4. So do
Diagems ! Genuine diamonds
are cut by expert diamond cot-
ters. So are Diagems I ;
What is the difference then?
Simply this . . A diamond
which is the hardest substance
in the world, is harder than a
Diagem. This is the basic dif-
ference between a genuine dia-
mond and a Diagem.
Don’t confuse with zircons or
synthetic diamonds you see ad-
vertised. Diagems are vastly
superior . . actually worn by
film stars, the super-rich, etc,
while their real diamonds are
home In the safe.
Magnificent rings, pendants,
earings. tie pins sold on 10-day
trial basis. Send for FREE
catalogue now. BOWMAN MAR-
KETING GROUP, Dept DT30.
Bowman House, Lea Road.
Waltham Abbey, Essex.
Shop: 154, Marylebone Road,
London. N.W.L, or call at either
address and see for vourseli
The case for moving family
planning into the High Street
By Violet johnstone
Joseph, Secretary of State
for Social Services, called
“factories of human
misery ” when he advo-
cated more domiciliary
family planning services at
the conference.
There are 30-odd such
home- visiting schemes now
operating. Only lack of
money is preventing more
teams of doctors, nurses
and health visitors going
to women with the help
that is needed.
It costs £4 a year for a
woman to visit a family
STOP gives a warning
C OLtN COODE and his second wiFc Elizabeth have a Family
between them that totals nine children. This may make their
work for the Society for the Treatment ot Over- Population
(STOP) sound contradictory but. as chairman, Mr Coode stresses
that they're Fighting the producing of unwanted children.
To them, and other volunteers who run this new group in
Birmingham, reduction of population is “ almost a missionary matter.**
At its office in the city centre. STOP is compiling information
about world population trends and hopes to persuade governments,
and religoius and other groups to tackle the problem here.
At the same office its one full-time worker, Mrs Sybil Sheridan,
mother of three, sees people who want information about contracep-
tion. and some who want to know if they can get an abortion.
Mrs Sheridan simply directs them to doctors, clinics or other
agencies that can help. She believes STOP is filling a gap left by
the National Health Service, local authorities and the hard-pressed
family planning clinics. The group was started by a barrister and a
solicitor, both men. Why aren’t more women working in it ?
" Marked women are too busy," suggested Mr Coode. But
his wife, who manages a group medical practice, doesn't use that
excuse. “ I've watched women on a housing estate of 16,000 mind-
lessly going on having children because they didn't know any
better," she explains.
Her husband doesn't deny the need people have to produce
children, but he emphasises. " After the loving comes the living. Wo
are !«*t as interested in the South American woman with too many
mouths to feed as fha girl in Birmingham who gets pregnant,”
JENNY MARKS
planning clinic, £13 if she
is visited at home. In the
latter case the cost is
always borne by the Health
Service. In cold economic
terms this is minim al com-
pared with the cost of a
therapeutic abortion or
else, in the long term,
having another baby.
“In the year since we
began operating our pilot
scheme in Glasgow we have
seen about 70 families and
haven't had a single rejec-
tion — although we have
occasional initial difficul-
ties,” I was told by Dr
Alison Mack, administra-
tive doctor at the Glasgow
FP A.
“ Health visitors, social
workers and sometimes
G Ps will refer a case to us.
We contact the Family
G P first, then send our
own woman doctor to make
the first visit.
“ So often, the mothers
concerned look on having
another baby as a way of
fulfilling themselves. They
don’t take the long-term
view.”
“ We don’t have domi-
ciliary services and don’t
need them now in Sweden,"
said Birgitta Linner. one of
the two speakers from
Sweden at the conference
and a leading sex educa-
tionalist
Sweden went through the
dilemmas which Britain is
suffering today in the thir-
ties, when they had a
similar Commission on
Population.
Sweden made sex educa-
tion in schools compulsory.
The State took control of
the selling of all contra-
ceptives.
“ We have accepted
sexuality and its dual func-
tions," says Mrs Linner,
“ as reproductive and as
the natural basis of a stable
relationship outside mar-
riage. The young genera-
tion are not suffering from
the guilt feelings that their
parents felt.”
Are they happier for it ?
I asked. “ I think so,” said
Mrs Linner.
“ Very few of us in
Sweden would like to turn
the clock back. The sort of
moral issue that . worries
young people in Sweden
today is certainly not sex ,
but world hunger. For
example."
1,500 ONLY
QUUED RECUNERS
FOR YOU......
Surely , one of the best
of all summer buys
Hus Immensely romlortable Barden
RecUner is offered to all readers.
U really is rattoer special — and so
is tbe price. But you will have to
burry with vour order. There's only
1,500 left and when they've gone you
will have missed your summer
luxury I
The Hedmers are quilted wlLh thick
foam padding; and are covered in
cotton canvas, which is a multi-
coloured floral design on a red back-
ground. They have sturdy light-
weight frames made of rustproofed
tubular steel and polished wooden
armrests.' There’s more besides too.
The RecUner Is roomy, strong and
comfortable. The seat is ISin wide
and the back, which Fully supports
the shoulders, is 27 in high and tr la
co mpleted with a padded headrest.
The seat Is completely spring held..
Just relax in the chair, lift the arm-
rests with your fingertips and the
back reclines to- Tour dlfiereat aegis
positions. The chair does, of course,
fold for easy storage and it Is ideal
far the boot of the car.
Chairs with similar attributes oi the
Recliner would normally sell at about
E7 — but this special promotion
enables us to offer It at only £4-75,
delivered complete to your door.
Remember, though, there's only 1J>00
left, so order quickly. Every order,
quite naturally, is covered by onr full
money-back, guarantee.
KfC
Please send all' orders to:
ALL SQUARE PURCHASING,
Section REC , 50/54, Byron Road,
London, Eh 4bHF. ( Callers welcome .)
RECUNER OFFER
Please send me Recliner(s) at
£4*75 each. I enclose cheque/P.O.
value
Address ... ... .....................
ALL SQUARE PURCHASING,
Section REC,
EQ/54 Byron Road, London, Ell 1SW.
14
FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1971
155. Flset Sheeex, London, E.C.4.
Tel: 01-353 4242. Telex: 22874/5/5-
. Classified Advertisements: 01-583 3939.
LIBYA PLAYS WITH FIRE
COUNTERCOUP IN THE SUDAN follows on kidnapping
in Libya, and Gen. Nimeiky is proclaimed agmnas national
leader after his ousting by a Communist faction. The.
internal events in the Sudan ought not to distract Britisn
and international attention from the flagrant act of piracy
vesterday by the Libyan Government President Gadafpi-
h responsible for the hi-jacking of a British^ airliner and
• the removal of two passengers who, according to inter-
national air law, were under the protection of the British
' flag Mr Godber has demanded an apology and the release
; of the captured Sudanese. It matters little whether, as
events in the Sudan will prove, they are official personages
or ordinary travellers. Kidnapping should be no part of.
civilised government
Mr CftDBER’s.protest was in strong terms. CoI.Gadaffi
may think that he got the measure of the British in 1970,
when he turned them out of their Libyan air base, and
that he can ignore the British demand. If he does so, it
is important that the matter should not rest there, but
should be pursued in- step with the Sudan. Experience is
teaching Britain the bitter lesson that the line of least
resistance in diplomacy produces trouble even jri the short
run. Too many such incidents are swept under the table,
and a disreputable precedent was set in 1967 when Britain
failed even to ask for the release of the Congolese political
leader. Moise Tshombe, made captive in similar circum-
stances. This latest incident calls for a serious appraisal
of Commonwealth air routes over such trouble spots.
The Sudan could have reacted much more dangerously
to the hostile act of Libya, were Khartoum not riven by
factional war. Gen. Nimeiry was ousted four days ago
after turning Communist colleagues out of office and
purging the administration. He. is also the man who
declined to line up the Sudan with the new federation of
Egypt, Libya and Syria. It is unlikely that he will now
feel obliged to join the federation out of gratitude to Libya.
For the love of independence is deeply rooted in Sudanese
minds. The act of Col. :Gadapfi, for which there is some
evidence of Egyptian collusion, must remain a puzzle. The
explanation may be that these Arab States had come to
regard Gen. Nimeiry as their colleague and comrade in
council, and any successful coup against him a. potential
danger to themselves.
MORE WITHOUT WORK
ALTHOUGH unemployment is normally expected to worsen
at this time of year, the July increase of 61,000 in the
absolute numbers ■ out of work is disconcertingly high.
True, the total .of 728,000 wholly unemployed on a
seasonally adjusted basis is swollen by some 24,000 adult
students registering for vacation work. Likewise the
additional item of 150,000 unemployed school leavers is
inflated by many leaving ahead of tune in search of first
.-jobs.- Nevertheless, the picture is depressing and, while
Mr Barber’s latest reflationary boost Jo the_economy has
brightened the outlook, it win be some time yet before
the impact on employment will be decisively felt. What
the figures indicate is the effect of a shake-out of labour
under pressure of stringent credit, high interest rates, wage
inflation and the weeding out of less efficient businesses.
The figures are also a pointer to a- great deal of surplus
capacity In industry. As the reflationary measures come
through, the plant and labour will bb- there for raising the
level of production, and as the slack is taken up unit
costs may be expected to improve. But the gains will not
be consolidated without a real abatement of. wage inflation.
Yet the TU C may find it difficult to respond to the Govern-
ment’s appeal to hold down wage claims, as a counterpail:
to the Confederation of British Industry’s new system of
voluntary price restraint, reinforced by parallel moves on
the part of nationalised industries. The public’s response
to the mini-Budget could be quick and effective. The
tendency has been for it to save rather than spend, out
of fears of redundancy. Once people become conscious
that the economy is on the upgrade, .consumer expenditure,
aided by the easing of credit, will recover.
DOTHEBOYS HALLS
YESTERDAYS DOSSIER, prepared, by the National Union
of Teachers^ of 50 of the most dilapidated schools in Britain
makes predictably horrifying reading. It is no use pointing
out that some of the conditions- described are aJLihe . kind
-which used to be regarded as character forming when
imposed on the inmates of expensive and ancient public
schools. Stinking stoves, leaking roofs and rats in outhouses
are indeed the sort of inconvenience still cheerfully
borne by pupils in some of our seedier preparatory schools
But parents in the independent sector have at least chosen
their children’s lot They have, in the literal meaning of
the phrase, “ bought it” Those who are forced to educate
their young in the State sector have to take what is given
to them; if they were free, they would no doubt draw the
line at rats actually in the classrooms.
Mrs Thatcher should meditate on the possibility of
introducing some element of choice (and with it the healthy
pressures- of consumer tastes) into State education. - She
should also reflect on the oft repeated moral that the
resources available from taxation will .never in themselves
be wholly adequate to the maintenance .of an up-to-date
education system. Meantime, however, these appalling
schools must either be knocked down or properly renovated.
.Teachers, who are not protected, by legally enforceable
rules about working conditions, have as much right as
parents to insis t on prompt action. Sometimes, no doubt,
building afresh proves cheaper than improvement, but the
Government would be unwise to suppose that this is always
so. After all, as far as houses are concerned, improvement
in preference to demolition has for long had official blessing;
why should this not also apply to schools?
NOW— HELSINKI NON-STOP
t
BEA now flies non-stop from London Heathrow to Helsinki
every day. Flights depart at 1030, arriving af 1410. Return
flights, also daily, depart Helsinki at 1515 and arrive Loudon
at 1655.
We take yon by Trident the most advanced jetliner flying
to Europe, and our first-class Sovereign Service is available
on all' flights:
If you’re heading Tor. Helsinki; go the fast, non-stop way.
Fly BEA! 4 .
On Mondays only, SSASf^ ***** *
Helsinki and. London are 1420 and 1710
No.1 in iuropa
Europe, realism & the
Tor
©
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
T J
TJf a sense this article is for Con- By NORMAN ST JOHN-STEVAS, M P
ser natives only. It seeks to
resolve the paradox of how it
is that Hie party of patriotism
and traditional loyalties, the party
of Queen and country, the party in
short of ** England,” has become
the European party, while Labour,
the stronghold of internationalism
and socialism, the party of pro-
d brotherhood, is being led
jress and
by Mr Wilson into a narrow pro-
vincial doister, there, to meditate
the values of legitimacy within the
party, in the speech with which he
opened the Westminster seminars
on Europe for peers and members
of the Parliamentary party: “It
is our primary objective to guaran-
tee. in so far as we can the security
and independence of Britain in the
sense that we are able to live the
life of our choosing, and to keep
British power and prosperity and
the party’s European policy, far
from being a betrayal of its his-
toric principles, represents their
contemporary culmination .and ful-
filment.
Tb at this should be so and seen
to be so is all the more important
because the most formidable chal-
lenger of the party’s official policy,
Mr Enoch Powell, is attempting to
play the patriotic, not to say the
tribal, card and so to trump the
leader’s ace.
In fact, the strength of Toiy
■Europeanisin' “lies m its' patriotic
base, the hard-headed and' realistic
assessment that- it is only within
a wider European union that
British interests can be safe-
guarded and advanced as we move
into the last quarter of the 20th
century. Realism has long been
the basis of Tory foreign policy,
which is oue reason why Conserva-
tives tend to be a little cool about
the United Nations, since they see
what this organisation is doing
rather tban what it claims to do.
Conservatives see European union
as the framework in which best
to promote our two paramount
needs as a great trading nation —
peace and stability — which benefit
not only Britain but the rest of the
world at the same time.
Realism enables Tories to see
that the European setting is essen-
tial for Britain to develop sus-
tained economic strength without
which there can' be no , effective
foreign policy, and that above all
it is necessary for our successful
defence, still tbe first duty of any
British Government Defence,
accordingly, has played a domin-
ranging itself into blocs, Britain
can no longer attain this objective
on her own.
This is the context -within which
the argument of British sovereignty
must be conducted. The choice is a
simple one; do we give up some
measure of sovereignty in order
the better to command what re-
mains, or do we ding to the whole
without derogation in theory and
so lose total control in practice?
Conservatives who are instinct-
ively disinclined to make any sur-
render of British autonomy should
ponder the stark choice and -at the
same time attempt to see it ie pro-
portion. Vast areas of national
sovereignty will be unaffected, and
the accession roust always be seen
in the light of the Frime Minister’s
statement to the. House of Com-
mons on his May accord with -Pre-
sident. Pompidou: “We were in
agreement that the maintenance
and strengthening of the fabric of
co-operation in such a Community
requires that decisions should in
practice be taken by unaaimous
agreement when vital national
interests of any one or more mem-
bers are at stake.”
Only one answer
The loss-of-sovereignty fear is
deep, but no less false for that. The
choice does not tie between nat-
ional identity and federal subjuga-
tion but is a rather different one.
Are we going to help to shape the
political European union of the
future 'so that it takes into account
British needs and interests, or are
we, because of a failure of nerve,
to stand aside and allow it to take
ant role in Tory apologetics for' -shape without us? Tory philosophy
joining the European Community:
the theme has dominated the
speeches of the Foreign Secretary
on European unity and swelled
Out in a concluding 'diapason in the
Prime Minister’s historic broadcast
of July 3 recommending the terms
of entry to the nation.
The Tory leaders hold, and
rightly so, that although the letter
of the treaty of Rome is economic.
‘. j - •- ._r ji- l-i* i
can give only one answer to such
a question.
A further Tory difficulty in giving
enthusiastic support to the Euro-
K ean cause has been tbe vague
at potent fear that to do so would
be in some way to betray the
Commonwealth and to destroy our
special relationship with the United
States. Yet all the major Common-
wealth countries and America have
remains, iti ? v.-orld ever more
dominated bv communications:
that of the English language. This
is what President Hr Gaulle could
neither forget nor forgive.
The Conservative party, like any
other party, is concerned not only
with Foreign but with domestic
interests. It is oF significance then
that membership or the Com-
munity will directly benefit the
two interests traditionally associ-
aled with the party, agriculture
and industry.
The agricultural vote has de-
clined in importance but it exer-
cises an influence over Tory
sentiments out of proportion to its
absolute electoral value. A move
away, from a subsidy to a levy
system ol support is essential if
British agriculture is to expand,
which is why l he party bad de-
cided to make th»s change irrespec-
tive of the outcome of the Euro-
pean negotiations. The Community
agricultural, policy may have draw-
backs for the consumer, but for
the British farmer it means a
great new opportunity.
As for industry, while the Con-
servative party has never been
the creature oF the Confedera-
tion oF British Industry in I he
sense that the Labour party has
been dominated L»> lhe trade
unions, it roust carry gre«t weight
with Conservatives that the
leaders of British industry through
the CBI have given unqualified
support to British membership.
Interests, however important,
are not the whole story. Thp. Con-
servative party exists to conserve:
and what is more important to
conserve than the European civil-
isation of which we are at unce
co-creators and co-heirs ? One does
not have to be a cold war warrior
to see that this civilisation, both
precious and fragile, is under con-
tinuous threat from the Com-
munist East. One does not ba\e to
suffer from paranoia to recognise
that the barbarians today are not
'clamouring outside the walls but
are entrenched within the city
seeking to destroy the traditions
of civilisation and civility which
more than anything else make
life worth living in contemporary
Britain. And one does not have to
be either seer or prophet to grasp
that our civilised way of life can
be better defended in unity rather
than in division.
Gambling with the Economy ft '
0 :
leads Dr Paul Einag CJnj^JK) to so
Gm-eramVnt appears to have
opted for a reluin to stop- “Jj ate ^3,,^ not to abuse “thr
n arc! the prospect ot ait import- : ncre a$e of their bargaining power;
,-nik it is regrettable that the
b
~ - «. , p JUlMUffr \
fed boom, * by the measures theycould 4 deliver the goods?
arm ou need by Mr Barber on July ^ JAMES KlOORHpUgj, f
19.
A great deal seems to depend
upon the powers of the Confedera-
tion of British Industry and the
Trades Union Council to deliver
the goods, and if they fail to do
so. then the present inflationary
trend will be compounded.
A further point i.s that the recent
rtrength on the balance oF payments
has been due, lo a significant extent,
to favourable terms oF trade and
flows of hot money. There is the
clear pn#«ibility of a deterioration on
thiw front. . ,
The main surprise, however, is that
these decisions- for which there seems
to bp a vptv slender economic case,
should have been taken just before
entry into the EEC, when there is
an obvious premium on a strong
balance of payments, and iF anything,
a slishMv underemployed economy.
Pension delay
London, Sj L£i- lw V-
• L* :i ‘
■’7 CL*
SIR— The Government has found it
self in such a satisfactory nnancia. •
position that it -has been able tt, k
reduce Purchase Tax at a cost of : ,.
£255 million in a full year and repaj *■'
£256 million off Britain s debt to flu , iV-
Internationa! Monetary Fond.
Yet it still maintains, albeit in a,
email voice which those not person. -
ally affected may not even hear.
that it cannot afford at^ present to -IK
find the comparatively ony^ amount 1
of £7 million needed to keep it*k
long-standing promise to reduce the , ij
quriifving age for the pajroent oFlti
Serrice pension increases from 60 ^
*°This is both indefensible. mlgt
shameful. Service pensioner in the
Perhaps the election cycle has been aKe _bracket affected, who. like my- , r>p
shortened, and we are in ior a -,c 3re gttn 'being denied their'-' JLi.r
General Flection before we go into
the Common Market? IF not. why this
gamble, when a short while aeo
ministers were prepared to wait for
the effects oF the April Budget to
work through?
M. ORME
Economic Policv Group,
Monday Club.
London, S.W.l.
Delivering the goods
SIR — What, in view of the spate of
militant action by trade unionists.
self, are stiff
promised “rises.” will not. in spite
of Mr Barber's latest endeavours, be
able to afford to rush out and buv.
new cars, colour TV sets* refrigera-
tors, etc. , , .... ,
Is there no champion willing to
stand up and brine home to tbe
Government the injustice thev are
doing to Serrice petitioners in the .
55 to 60 age group bv continuing to
“ hedge ” ou this matter ?
Mr Nabarro or Mr Enoch Powell
perhaps ?
T. A. SHELLSWELL
St Just-in-Penwith. Cornwall.
TVl}!t
j j *
riV
Free school milk for the
undernourished child
Market decision by one
party is not enough
SLR — The selection of those school
children who should have free milk
is being argued too much in terms
of roonev and politics. Is it too late
to suggest that the use of tables of
.. .1.1.1 kni'fiGh .nrl 1 rTO KIUS in snCWPr
its spirit' is profoundly political, ' backed the policy of British entry.
and if . the project .for the enlarge-
ment of the Community were to
founder we could not simply go
hade to the beginning; the whole
defence of the West -would be.
placed in jeopardy. They see also,
and without the myopic anti-
American- distortion, that afflicts
some members of. the extreme
Gaullist wing, that in the next
decade . Eu ro pe win have to
shoulder a much greater share of
the burden of joint defence with
the Lhiited States.
. For. a dassic restatement of the
aims of Conservative foreign policy
one has only to ,go to Sir Alec
Furthermore New Zealand, the
rock on which the European enter-
prise might have foundered as far
as the Tory party is concerned,
has obtained a fair and even a
generous deal to safeguard her
interests.
Perhaps the trouble here is a
time-lag in perception. The multi-
racial Commonwealth is of a diffe-
rent order from the old tightly knit
association of predominantly white
nations. With this transformation,
power has passed from the Com-
monwealth. m that it can no longer
constitute a coherent economic or
political alternative. Bnt another
Douglas-Home, still the bearer of infinitely more important conquest pondering.
One final consideration i= not
wholly out of place. The debate
about Europe should idea 1! v be a
national, not a party, one but the
Leader of the Opposition seems
intent that it should he the latter
and believes apparently that party
unity should have n higher priority
than the national interest. If this
is how it turns out. Conservatives
should remember, as the wordly-
wise Mr Callaghan pointed out the
other day. that Lhe future of the
Government is now indissolubly
bound up with the success of its
European policy. Whatever the
constitutional niceties, neither
Prime Minister nor party could
survive rejection on its central
theme. Jf one happens to be a
Tory, that is aa outcome worth
we i ait, height and age give an answer
- ild SJ — »■—**—
which would encore the identification,
together with medical certificates in
exceptional cases, of any child who"
could be undernourished ?
A small committee of pediatricians
could probably produce the appro-
priate figures and devise a suitable
chart from which each term a school
would read off, after measuring its
pupils, which should have free milk.
H. MILNE S WALKER
P.U.C.S.. M-R-C.P.
Bickertoo, Cheshire.
Elms ignored
How George Brown
swayed Market
DISCREET : but absorbed
observer of the Common Mar-
ket debate in the Commons
is Sir Con O’Neill, 59, who since
1969 has. headed. our official team . . -
at Brussels and .has received less A motto imposed
than his due 'for the outcome.
London Day by Day
ir
totally new idea with which to take
the art world by storm. But he freely
admits that he has been waiting for
some time.
Sir Con. miaht- be forgiven if, sur-
veying the front benches, his mind
strayed into more personal reflections.
-In-1066 he- was -experted- to -succeed
Sir Frank Roberts as Ambassador in
Bona.
George Brown decided otherwise. Sir
Roger Jackling went to Bonn and 5ir
Con left the Foreign Office for HiU,
Samuel and Co. When George Brown
resigned. Sir Con was recalled, to. be
Deputy Under Secretary, and later
became head of our Brussels team.
But For George Brown he would now
he in Bonn and Lord George-Brown,
an ardent marketeer, might think less
• well of the terms we got.
ANE thing the late Lord Reith would
not have appreciated about yester-
day’s service of thanksgiving for him
at Westminster Abbey was tbe app
European sceptics
(CONSERVATIVE MFs were won-
dering yesterday
. . wham Harold
Lever. Labour spokesman on Europe,
had in mind when he su ggested in
the Commons the night before that
some members of tbe Government
would “ vote, against, their convictions,
in favour nf the Market because on
balance they believe it to be in the
public interest that they should, sup-..
•port the Tory Government-”
The Prime Minister ran certainly
count on enthusiastic hacking from the
Cabinet itself but there are probably
a few sceotics in the lower reaches of
the Administration.
Perhaps lhe man »n llir rnnf diffi-
cult position is Edward Tavjnr. a
jun ; or Minister at the 5rnlti>h Office
who has been a passionate anti-
marketeer.
A Risht-ninger of 31. hp obviously
hopes for a long Ministerial career.
Westminster’s nnuression is that he is
moderating Ms' Market views and will
not feel it accessary to resign.
appear-
ance oa the front page of the Order
of Service of the words, " Nation shall
speak peace unto nation."
The BBC's first Diiecler-General
disliked the political undertones of this
motto. But Lady Snowden, wife of
Labour’s pre-war Chancellor Philip
Snowden and an earl) Governor of
the Corporation, imposed it on both
Reith and the BBC.
It was ironical too that this service,
unlike Richard Dimblebj’s memorial
service, did not use closed-circuit tele-
vision: And in Poets’ Corner it was
almost impossible to hear I he Moder-
ator of the Church of Scotland, though
the bagpipe penetrated cierj where.
A notable absentee was Sir Hugh
Greene, the present D.G.% predecessor.
He is just back from America-
SIR — Mr B. A. Bishop (July 171, who
complains of the lack of action to
combat tbe spread of Dutch Elm
Disease in North Kent, prompts me
to add that Gloucestershire has also
been hit by the disease. As he states
elm trees do seem to die within
about four weeks.
Quite a large percentage of tbe
b»g trres in many parts of the coun-
try are elm trees and. if- the disease
is allowed to continue to spread, many
people will be shocked by the changes
in scenery it will bring in a very
short time.
■Surelv elm trees are worth saving
and .thK I would suggest, can only
be. achieved by prompt action on a
national scale.
A. G. DYKES
Thorubury, Glos.
From Mr GILBERT LONGDEfl.
31 P tCon .1
SIR — Mr Philip Goodhart (July 201
quotes the cogent reasons stated in
the Conservative party weekly news
letter of June 12 against a referen-
dum. and rightly argues that they are
equally cogent against imposing a
three-line whip
The fact that this issue is one which
“ transcends party political bound-
aries *’ makes tbe norma] party pro-
cedure inappropriate: and anyway a
whip would make no difference what-
fever to the voting of convinced
anti-Marketeers.
t course the Prime Minister is
ed in asking Government sup-
's to support him on this great
irise; and in telling them ex-
plicitly that, even if the vote is “ free,"
a de cat must mean his resignation
and i General Election. Since it
wouk be an- act of faith, he is entitled
to mike a free vote conditional upon
the Ipposition allowing a free vote
too.
Tb s country must not be taken into
the 2 uropean. community by the vote
of ai y one parly alone. • It is Parlia-
ment which must decide, and a
derison taken without party strings
will tave immensely greater impact
both at home and on the Continent.
It does not seem to occur to
R. F. Delderfield (July 20) that if Mr
HeatB had used the words attributed
to Fopcbe they would have been true.
Not oven Fouche could have believed
that the Prance of 1795 enjoyed
“ repiesCntative government” with
any ‘principles’* to he “ violated ”
by an appeal to tbe people.
GILBERT LONGOEN
House of Commons.
Danger overhead
SIR — Let me add to your apt head-
ing “Elms Ignored ** with “Elms
Wilson and Gorton
** 7 tf //iv mind, firm her, it re benefits
of n fireut debate are bnetmins:
increasingly nnqaanti liable."
benefit of his 55 -years’ operatic ex-
perience. For he is stiiJ mad about
bis work.
Livelier Lord’*
Hie first iroman rice-pi esideni in the
Rowd Institute of British .1 reinfects*
hisloru is amona three new nnrs
announced naderduu. She is Miss
Madine Bcddmqtun, in price ip prac-
tice in. London, ir ho is on In the
second woman to ncrue on the
Instdules counc'tL
25 years on
fpOMORKOYV Edgar Evans, principal
-*• t»nor, celebrates his 2-iih anniver-
sary with Cment Garden Ooera, where
be bas sung more roles than nay of her
performer. Pf the original ioumiing
company in 1916, he is lhe only prin-
cipal singer si ill there.
The youngest of 13 children of a
Welsh farmer, lie decided on his
future : at eichr after hearing a
Cnvnnt Garden opera on the radio his
unde had brought down from Loodon.
Haring started at Sadler’s Wells
before the war at £3 a week, he luid
“I LSS JivP'ti than the West
Indians." .^nmccrne observed i n a
box at Lord's » esierday morning, sur-
\ eying the f.ur-sued but decorous
crowd. That wa* ul noon, l'nsland
was baiting steadily, wickcfs intact.
An hour or *o later, it was different
and a persir-leni voice from Hie
roBion oF the old Taieru — " Keep the
pressurp ou. ho\s! " — suggested that
lhe Caribbean was there in spirit.
Four leading English balsraeu back
in the pavilion - and enough Indians
present to make that . sound a
triumph. Three dashed oot from the
stands, illiciti'. to embrace F.. D.
So Ik ar of RiMiibav for a miraculous
CfMcb. A shade more decorous than
Hie West Indians, perhaps — but the
Indians are learning.
Ever-ojteu door
No new Friends
J^ORD ECCLES*S concession on
museum charges, that members of
bona fide supporting societies shonld
be admitted to museums and galleries
free, has not produced a rush to set
up "Friends" all over the place.
The Tate already successfully runs
Its Friends and Young Friends and
the British Museum has its Society.
Others, like the V and A and the
National Portrait Gallcrv. have not
ruled out similar possibilities.
But such organisations cannot be
launched with a lot nf monrv and
staff. Roy Strong, director oF the
National Portrait Gallery, points out.
lie wonders. too whclhrr Hie concept
or Friends is outdated — "Sainn old
trin.« to Afghanistan and candle-lit
parties.”
He is hopefully waiting lor a
TAESPFFE their descent from Fletcher
Christian and the other Bounty
mutineers, the Pitcairn L« I and pi’s are
lodav possibly tbe world’s most law-
abiding society. All the same I hear
from Lhe iriand’s radio operator,
Fletcher Christian's grcat-sreal-gicaL-
grandson Tom. that Pitcairn has just
had iail trouble.
When two visitors went lo I he jail
'and one went inside io havp hi-, pic-
hirp taken through lhe door bars, the
rinor was Found to have rusted solid.
No amount of effort hv the risitors or
the islanders could close it.
Tom Christian said thev had nor had
anyone in the jail except in sweep it
out lor as long as he remembered—
“ but to have tile door stuck open
could he a llirrai to lhe day when it
ini^ht be needed."
Ja Culuf iu “ Turuiuloi
Just as it was
me
jeslerday tliaL it was Eridi
Kleiber who by choosing him to play
Hermann in “The Queen nl SpJdcs "
ready “put me op the map.”
A firm believer in ,i hnmegro^n
British opera tonipain. Ijc ni-u ur|j
rfiunt to his nati'e w,»|r*. in give lhe
Welsh National Qp&d Company liie
"D 1 CHARD HARRIS'S “ performance
is outshone by that of Alec
Guinness us lhe vacillating Charles il,
who Cromn^il cicutuuljy hangs." —
J 1 rum a local newspaper's uotc on the
hint ’* Cromwell.”
PETLRBGKGUGH
Dangerous." For surely there can
be no more dangerous tree in Eng-
land than the elm. though not in-. .
variably. How many elms, thank s to
thrir solayiug roots, have been
blown across roads to the great in-
convenience or actual disaster to
many motorists?
While Mr Bishop rightly deplores
the nngflpct of elms liable to disease,
and killrd within four weeks, he
could have added that such a tree
cao itself be a killer, in a split
scorn! !
Dncf* on a perfect June morning,
vrimHess and full of sun, without a
rr*-ak of warning a huge limb, cora-
P ,r,p . un to the stock of an old elm,
*‘-*mp away and crashed to the
ground.
Fortunately J was just out of
reach. Had T been sitting by the
trunk I should not now be penning
a_ warning to the unwary who seek
shade or shelter under an old elm.
HUBERT STUDDY
London, W.9.
From the High Commissioner for
Australia.
SIR-j\Vhen reporting (July 22) the
replyj t0 . Mt Roy Jenkins, Mr John
. in rlisruccTncr airant. inc?
Ridley, in discussing events of 1963
and 1969, wrote:
“ It is confirmed in London that the
Australian Government adopted an ea-
trcmfcly tough line iu 1968 and 1969
towards Mr Jenkins’s attempts to stem
Hie outflow of portfolio investment.
£he Situation -was aggravated by the
bitteh personal antipathy that existed
between Mr Gorton, then Prime
iftnteer of Australia, and Mr Harold
Wilson.
Debates on Swabey case
SIR —I understand that The Dailu
TeLegs-aph is urging official recon-
sioci ation of lhe Swabey case. The , . — In
h V aac J?- av ® bt L en I71ade forma/ accord, espeaaffv considering
•affable In lhe public ID the nffiriat their different nnlfrira!
*if ca ,p[ tiiis with great surprise.
.Apart from the usual to-and-fro of
messages inevitable between Prime
Ministers of such doselv linked
countries as Britain and Australia, the
encounters Mr Gorton
ha d wit h Mr Wilson were during tbe
Lonnripn wealth Prime Ministers’ Con-
f n Er f n n c l’ n j »69 when Mr Gorton was
in London for that purpose.
I was present on practically every
SSS^h°^ bo J£ a tthe conference and
elsewhere, when Mr Gorton and Mr
StehtL? 56 *’ At ?° bme was there the
slighteg suggestion of antipathy, let
a !^J a W^ :erneSS, .i. Iodeed > what was so
- , ? vas tile manner in which
they quickly established- an e »sv. £-
available in the public in the official
reports of lhe debates on it in the
House of Lords.
Having studied ibem very carefully,
it n I®Jiy oilier people I have been
irft with the unhappy conclusion that
Mr Swabev was the victim of preiu-
ou-n so that a miscarriage of justice
occurred.
G. D. ROKELTNG
Chichester, Sussex
No flags for Waterloo
different polftical philo^lfies.
} V* 6 T,evpr known
n£«£ ? P - Ca ^ about Mr Wilson in
Jv®.? J?l eiM fly terms, despite the
S™i Uh Tj^, d,ffer ? 3ces oF oP'oion which
Australia and Britain
L3bour C Governrocnt° nS ““ * '" e
ggSvWS to W SWTS
lan S«age which can mffv be
oesenbed as warm and appreciative.
ALEXANDER DOWN PR
Australia House.
MR-proF; r.teorge b. Cooper (June
»*»? disappointed to find no flags
Aprlrv House on Waterloo Day.
My 5'eat-crrat-grandfather was
Vtnimrlcrl .It Waterloo and on June 13
Weather forecast— fine
to pub-
I visited | hr battlefield' It 'is appaV" which it'wS S 1 "® 24) in
rpt that Waterloo Day means some- ' suggested that
in .he Belgians anT FreiK
SS 3 C rf BI S 5 & ^ued
At
roovin
mripoi
M p.m. there was a simple but T ha??' recS“d ^bat ^l7°thSS? en £ e
ing crvrmony at lhe French knew oerfertlv \Sn 1 J? 11 those who
^onal when a Frenchman in ISIS no conri uia=,ni-_ ?lr® e C® could be
_ Frenchman in 1S15
military uniffirm laid a wreath. As
far ns I knmv there no British be’from" now Vn^ 1 «« weather
crrmiony in honour oF the me/who A Jort^-diS-aSIL s ®P ten,b er 21.
suffered so much on June 18, 1815. their v|«£ w®Sd beT^Fine^ ° n
nan in 1S15 no good weather before T«n« Qi
vreath. . A, equally «
K. A. L. SEARS
Shceruess. KenL
i a a t. ftann - " iiir «:
ram-
Bank charges
From Brie. Sir MARK IfEfiXlKER
PAUL WILLIAMS
Chippenham, Wilts.
SIR— ir
. lt postil for an hour’s
douis'ion ^vrtii the bank manager.
Post Office gimmick
SSrSHS with
bn. Otlu p, would it not be better to ft ? ,ss ^ a jcnan (July 16) aboS
eland him aa expensive lunch and siovcnly English currently in use. may
have the same discussion elsewhere ? R’thfrfte I?®? 1 !? 11 £9 Ae article on
f ll } lr E0Slish
boffi Sf- TI,Prc aC ° m Scopc f or jf e( E|gh] ”) 5ie P English
JrJlftZV
W-UIK HLNN1KER
Cardiff.
G. K. BLAND
London, W.13.
Rrte.
-o
Voij
the |
i,
^ e L-rc
°£rv,C
;r
a mote
? n ;gr
rje 10re
«Hjcc
^da-
C 35
3C
Jolt
kii Mj
lo th e i
aoi
-in.; j
£ ' 5r ' C
-JP!
A CtJr 0 -
^ADVICE ON SEX AND
DRUGS IN LETTER
ABOUT CAMBRIDGE
’ By HUGH DAVIES
1 ?■'. P°^ ICE have bee a called in by Emmanuel
College, Cambridge, to investigate the
. .'anonymous circulation of more than 100 copies
: : Df a letter to next term’s freshmen advising
:hem of alleged drugs and sex.
The document was described yesterday by Mi* Peter
--..• Hunter Blair, vice-master of the college. Founded in
as *' obscene with libellous implications.” It was
sent from Cambridge on
July 1 to a number of
f'r. :
ASTRONOMY
JOB OPEN TO
FOREIGNERS
By ARRIAN BERRY
Political Staff
xv ITH a view to Britain’s
entry into Europe, the
Government said yesterday
that as from next year the
posts of astronomer royal
and director of the Royal
Greenwich Observatory will-
bc separated and open to
foreigners.
The ostensible reason for the
announcement is that Sir
Richard Woolley, the present
astronomer royal and director of
Uie observatory, is retiring at
the end of next year.
He is an Australian, and the
post of astronomer royal has
always been open to Common-
wealth ritizens. But throwing it
Dpen to foreigners marks a de-
parture which many British
scientists are likely to resent.
It was emphasised in White-
hall that the decision was taken
because of the world-wide im-
portance of astronomy and
because there was no longer
anv good reason for excluding
foreigners.
Britain’s stake
Mr Arthur C. Clarke, the
science writer, said: “The new
astronomer royal will be work-
ing in the most exciting era.
“The day of Barth-bound
optical observatories is gradually
coming to an end. So much more
can be seen from a vantage
point outside the alraosphere,
and I hope and believe Britain
will have a stake in this."
One advantage oF having a
separate astronomer royal is
that he will be freed from the.
Heavy administrative duties at
:he Herstmonceux Castle obser-
vatory and its subsidiary stations
overseas.
It will now be possible For a
glamorous personality to become
astronomer royal and, instead of
being an overworked official, he
be able to devote most of
his time to science — which has
seldom before been possible.
public schools.
Its authors, thought to be
a group of Left-wing students
who graduated from the col-
lege a month ago. claim- thry
have information to help
under-graduales “ settling into
the dull rut of Emmanuel
life.”
They allege the most common
drug in use in the college is
•‘ hash ’ available as ” a £1
deal " or at £12 an ounce. Acid,
or LSD, was also used for up
to " £1 per trip." The letter
states: 1 Speed enn be used for
a buzz, but can be dangerous."
Dons accused
The two pages oF typescript
also detail undergraduate sex.
sport under the influence ot
drugs and describes, under
“ useful activities." the printing
oF slogans on college bui 'dings.
It also makes allegations against
dons.
A note at the end The
strongest advice that we can
give is not to come here at all.”
Copies of the letter were re-
ceived by two bov$ at The Levs
School. Cambridge.
Mr Alan Barker, thru- head-
master. said yesterdav “ rt is
one oF the im**t d^graceful
documents I have seen in mv
tafe and is totally unre nr? tenta-
tive oF -the college in Question.
Mr Hunter Blair said: “The
college takes a very serious
view of this matter. ft is a dis-
tasteful invasion of the normal
privacy of the college."
Detectives inquiring into Hie
affair believe that a copv nf ihe
lisf oF Freshmen — a document
described by Mr Hunter Bl?ir as
“ private but not kept in a sate ”
—was stnlrn from the colleec.
All the boys concerned have
received another letter from
Mr David Williams, senior tutor
of Emmanual. stating the
college’s concern anti asking lor
the return of the letter.
K in
fifth form
Daily Telegraph Reporter
SECONDARY school
headmaster found more
than 20 of his fifth form
drunk when he walked into
their room after lunch. Ply-
mouth magistrates heard
yesterday.
The hovs and girls said they
h-cl drunk rm more lhan one
Pml of canned beer each, bought
from an off lirenre. but later
admitted that with the beer they
had taken “Mandys" — a sleep-
ing pill railed Mandrake which
contains the rime melh aqua June.
Mr W. A. Daniel, prosecu ling.
.*>aKl : ** The effect of iakios one
pint i?F beer with this drug is
lust as though a person has
consumed between hvr and 10
pint* m heer. The results arc
s La rutin g."
Sold in bar
Police, called in by the head-
master. i raced one source of ihc
drug to Christopher Fry, 18. a
dockyard apprentice fitter, who
pleaded guilty lo possessing
drug* and selling Ihrm in the
Cellar Bar oF the city's licrni
Grand Hotel.
Mi Daniel said that a number
of the children, mostly girls,
had admitted visiting the bar
at weekends and buying the
drugs from Fry For 10p each.
Two girls had stolen the. drugs
from their parents and sold them
to ' heir colleagues.
Frv. of Clcarbrnok Avenue,
Camels Head. Plymouth, wns
sent to a detention centre lor
three months and fined £25 with
£10-50 costs.
Earlier nine bovs and six
gills were sent to the juvenile
court accuser! of possessing
drugs, selling them and consum-
ing liquor under age. Three
c.isrs again*! bar staff' for sell-
ing liquur tu children were ad-
journed.
PRINCE’S VISIT
Prince Philip yesterday visi-
ted the Glasgow police head-
quarters and saw detective* and
forensic experts at work. Later
he opened the new Scottish
Stock Exchange, in St George’s
Place.
BOY WHO KILLED
MOTHER’S LOVER
IS FREED
Paul Massiel'it. 10. who stabbed
his mother’s Inver t-n. death, was
Treed hv Judgn William Morris
at Manchcslm- Grown Court
\e$tcrriav. Dii acting the iurv
in acquit Mat'd clot nn a man-
* laughter charge, he said:
"There arc ocra>ii»ns, inen-ifullv
verv rare, when human lilc can
be taken lawful!*.
“The best example* is sclf-
dpfencc. or when defending a
relative as in this case, the
mother and thr aunt, who are
being attacked."
Massfclot, of Thomas Street.
Rusholrae. Manchester, denied
killing James Walsh. 34. a
labourer, who was found dead
with knife wounds last February.
After drinking. Walsh had be-
come violent, al tacking the aunt
and Massielot with a shovel and
stick.
The Daily Te(cgmph. Fridas , July SS, 1371 15
‘Robin Hood’ legally
bought car with
bounced cheque
By JAMES O’ DRISCOLL, High Court Reporter
A YOUNG couple who sold a car to a “ con-
man ” posing as fi Richard Greene,” star
of : television’s “ Robin Hood,” were not
entitled to claim it back from the man who
Worry
for less tha
1%pa
You'll be doing a lot of motoring
in the next few weeks. So you need
the protection of the AA Breakdown
Service now more than ever.
If you break down on your own.
a motorway tow can easily cost £10.
A night call can cost as much as £b
before any work starts on your car
at all. But as an AA member,
you can call on free roadside help,
and a free tow if needed.
Asa member, you can also have
free advice about motoring law.
Special value in motor insurance.
The inexpensive 5-StarTravel scheme
for overseas touring. Free information
about routes at home and abroad.
And the famous AA handbook into
the bargain.
Full membership subscription is
£4-50 a year - less than 1|p a day.
In addition, an enrolment fee of £1 -50
is payable on joining the AA.
Join now. enjoy worry free motoring
on your holiday and throughout
the year.
S* - ! .-** * t "rs-g -* mtH * "
Join the AAtoday-you may need us tomorrow
FuffMembershqa costs £4-50 a year.plus an enrolment tee of £1-50 payable -i-nlv on loinin
An A A member’s wife (or husband) can have Associate Ma.nbmho be™ s for ran , adomona A-a .
To the Automobile Association, Fanum House. Leicester Square. London WCiH 7Lf
nowPlwseaend Members' Handbook, telephone boj l**/ a* u details ol jH sows*
□ I enclose £1-50 enrolment fee plus £4*50 for year's Full Membership. Tok-» Lu. ^ ^
□ 1 enclose £1-50enrolmentfee plus £5-50 for year’s Full and A^ociau b-.mbers.w. ■ o, * ■ - • •
□ Please send free colour brochure with information about AA sbv.«s *'* n ; - pac- ic^nform
I
Getting in on the act yesterday outside St. Paul’s
where Isabella Ladenis and Qayid Parish,. 6 , shared
a delicate embrace after the wedding of Mr
Christopher Inge and the former Miss Rosemary
Paget, daughter of Sir john and Lady Paget, of
Taunton, Somerset. The bridegroom is a grandson
of the former Dean of St. Paul's, who christened •
him 'at the cathedral in 1946.
Sinioii Dee fined £10
for assault on bailiff
DAILY TELEGRAPH REPORTER
IMON DEE, 36, the ex-television star, wept in court
yesterday .as he was accused of assaulting a
bailiff. He told the judge how he had bee'o forced to
live on social security.
Dee had been ~ taken to
West London county court by
police after attacking one of
three bailiffs making an' in-
ventory of his home in Dray-
ton Gardens, Chelsea. He was
lined £10 for assault
Mr Thomas Wilson, a bailiff,
said that when he arrived at
Dec’s flat he asked ■ him if he
could pay a levy order of £541.
First Dee hit him with a half-
clenched fist and then struck
him in the chest with a book.
Later, after tearirtg up the
levy order, he said Dee “rushed
at me and half lifted me and
half pushed me out the door.”
Dee. who appeared under his
real name or Cyril Nicholas
Henty-Dodd. was remanded in
custody until the afternoon when
he delivered a 10-minute speech
lo Judge Denis McDonnell.
Unemployment benefit
Nervously fingering a crucifix
around his neck aiid wearing
riark glasses, he said: *‘I have
no money at alL For one vear
I have been out of work and all
I draw from the labour exchange
is £6-90 a week to- keep my
wife, son, aged. Bine, and
daughter, aged five. -
" In seven years- I earned
£30.000 but my tax rating was
totally inaccurate. People in
show business will not have me
back. The Establishment is so
scared of the truth that I am
not allowed back.
“I was leant upon 'by David
Frost to an extent which is
hardly credible. He would not
let me have my own friends on
my programme.”
“He has grievance ’’
The judge said:- “He has a
grievance which quite rightly he
has aired in this court But this
has nothing to do with the
assault on the bailiffs, who were
doing their duty of executing
the warrant of possession."
After the case Doc said: * r If
I don’t get my programme back
soon you will see me in jail-
Everybody wants me hack,
except those in pnwer. These
comes a time in everyone's life
when they grow up. I have
grown up."
LABOUR PICKS
GALLUP EDITOR
FOR WEEKLY
By Our Political Staff
The Labour party has
appointed Mr Donald Ross. 29,
political editor of the Gallup
Poll, as editor of the. weekly
newspaper the party is to launch
in OcLobcr. ’
_ Educated at Aberdeen Univer-
sity, and a former Parliamentaxy
sub-editor with the’ Scotsman,
Mr Ross was Labour prospective
candidate for his home constitu-
ency. Ross and Cromarty, from
1967-1969. •
The paper will be sold through
newsagents. A circulation of
50,000 is expected. Mr Ross's
salary will, it is thought, be about
£2,700 a year. Gallup have not
yet appointed a successor.
bought it from the
trickster.
Lord Denning, Master of
the Rolls, said in the High
Court yesterday that the
crook had earned out in law
a proper contract of sale.
' The couple handed him the
log book of the 1964 Austin
Cooper “ S ” and exchanged
receipts for the sale when he
handed over his cheque
signed ‘ “ R. A. Green ” for
£450.
Mr Keith Lodbr Lewis, a post-
graduate chemist, and his wife
Elizabeth, 22, of Long Meadow,
Worthing, Sussex, asked three
appeal judges to -Jet them have
the car back from Mr Anthony
John Ayeray, a musician, oE
Spencer Road, Bromley, Kent
Mr Averay had innocently
bought it in good faith from
“Mr Green.”
Lord - Denning, Lord Justice
Philimore and Lord Justice
Meg aw were asked tn decide
yesterday which of the two
innocent; parties rightly owned
Ihe car now. They unanimously
agreed it belonged to Mr Averay.
u Rad luck ”
Giving judgment Lord Denning
said: “The rogue misrepre-
sented himself, which was fraud,
but the contract was there under
which, the property passed in
due course to Mr Averay.”
He “ very much regretted ”
having to make such a derision.
It was Mr Lewis’s “bad luck.”
The court allowed an appeal
by Mr Averay from an earlier
derision of Deputy-Judge Ellison,
at Bromley county court, that he
was liable to pay Mr Lewis £550
damages for wrongful detention
of the car.
The court yesterday made no
order on the costs of the action.
Mr Lewis was legally aided, but
paid a contribution of £100.
The rogue who caused all the
trouble has disappeared. - His
activities’ came, to light when
the cheque he gave Mr Lewis
was dishonoured and police
started inquiries.
Mr and Mrs Lewis were en-
gaged at the time the “con-
man" visited them. They now
run a small, .10-year-old car.
DRAGONS GO
INSTEAD
OF WALES
Dally Teleprapli Reporter
Welsh Hockey Asso-
ciation has cancelled a
17-dav tour nf Rhodesia by
its national side after being
asked to do so by Mr Eldon
Griffiths, Minister of Sport.
Instead, a club side, called
the Welsh Dragons,, has
been formed to make the
visit
The dub will comprise the
same platers and they will wear
the official Welsh national
team's red jerseys. They will
pla ythe two “Test" matches
and club games which had been
arranged for the national side.
Mr Myer Cohen, the Associa-
tion's chairman and a Cardiff
solicitor, said yesterday that the
tour- was different from others
to Rhodesia since they would be
playing against multi-racial
trams. There was no question
of apartheid being involved.
Mr Cohen was called to Lon-
don last week and told bv Mr
Griffiths that the tour should
not take place. The reasons
given were the United Nations'
resolution against economic nr
cultural relations with Rhodesia
and -talks between tbe British
and Salisbury governments.
Less objectionable
Mr Cohen said he had nrked
Mr Griffiths is a club side' could
make the tour instead. Mr
Griffiths had replied that be
rould not prevent this, but be
would have preferred that there
was no contact at alL
Mr David' Morgan, the pub-
licity officer, called the Minister’s
intervention “a solely political
decision."
He said: “After all,' the table
tennis players can go to China.
Why should we not go to
Southern Africa? ”
Mr Morgan agreed that the
forming of a dub side was a
subterfuge. The tom- party,
which will leave on Aug. 6,
would include the 16 players and
three officials originally chosen
to represent Wales.
DAILY TELEGRAPH
Full names fMr/Mrs/Miss)
BLOCK LETTERS PLEASE
Address
u
£igr=tUfS-
Date-
MAGAZINE
Since today’s issue was
Hinted, alterations in Purchase
ax have brought about price
changes in these advertise-
ments: —
Page 0 — H. Samuel. Reduction
on ail goads illustrated.
Page 5— British Ley land Mini
£641 instead ol £669 (Auto-
matic Transmission. £34 in-
stead ol £97-921.
Page 25 — British Leyland
Triumph Toledo, now' £918 ■ 12.
Page 54 — Jf. W. Benson. Sideral
with stainless steel bracelet
£18-50, or £2-74 down, 8
monthly payments £1-97.
With standard strap £14-75 —
or £2-27 deposit, 8 monthly
monthly payments oF £1-5G.
Taae 35— Tissot Sideral— His,
from £14-75. Hers, from
116-50.
The Woolwich Building \
Society is out to make you ....
money. It’s a non-profit-making organisation,
which means all the gains go into your pocket.
The Money Room is its centre - where
your money makes money.
It works like this. To ensure that we get the
money we need to provide mortgages we offer
a very good rate of interest to our. investors.
Take our Share Account as an example.
It offers. 5% interest after we’ve paid income
tax on iff for you, so in effect you’re getting
Over 8% if you pay income tax. Where else
can you get such a good return?
. With oyer £625,000,000 of assets your
money is quite safe, and your profit
assured.'
For further details write to the Woolwich
Money Room at the address below, or
call in on your local Woolwich branch.
oom.
ur money matters matter.
/ JtfAKK
WOOLWICH
BUtLDWG soccrr
„ . . tauten 5:iS6flK
16
The Daily Telegraph, Fridag, July 23, 1971
BRITISH FUNDS
GbiirtJaM wd to » ymarU
1971
Hiffh I Low
£ I £
Pric.?
•Wis
1£»%
4f%
inj-'
HJrtu.
35Uw
SS^i
97*
101°*
SD>b
»**
89%
Gu 3}* 69-7L. XB9»16
KicJl 61 % J97L £ 1001b
Stock
Pries +"or
I Pin* JU1, John..
iioOmiip
X&fUBk «?
J98M7
Kscb. 6Jt 1973 itlOWW
Hieh.6i\Uia £301%
Kl«. 3* I968-7J £961116
H. At W-73 £95U]6
LW H* 1371
Trea^bJl 1974.
Mitt ISvee. 3* ,®25~
Medium-dated iDn is Brim*)
£98>j
£98%
KTr-sw. bij 1976. £9*%
Ei«i 3*1974-77 £88
krans. 1JS 73-77 £87%
76-78 £<HJ%
74-79 £89
76-79 —79'*
! 77-00 £7B%
, 78-60 £87%
j'THl £75%
8MJ £102%
£83
, £*7%
h'nsuttSnffA £94%
Tn»s.61±9WB £78%
|FbdC-»'|®iM £98%
zs
«%
88%
Undated
251? lOmurtU Zi X —
36 [ITar Loan 3iX
J6% JConv. iit
31 Tpewuit 3*—
«% [Conaria 4fc....
25% mtaBarrbX..
CORPORATION STOCK
£19%
£P7l;
"tP«
£9! %
£109%
£82%
xsv-
JS^B
£109
£99%
£94
£99%
.«?«*
£01%
X42
JB3%
£55
£87
£96%
£30%
, £ 88 %
£ 101 %
£75
£»
£ 86 '*
£102 '
£Sb%
£86
£93‘s
£67%
£73%
£S9%
£97% £51%
£SM« £84
£9:% £89%
£Hr* £78%
A*. M.71* m-M £51%
Ap. M. 5t *59-80 £W%
ft»lfaet64 YJ.75 £88%
Bristol** TS-TT £64
Eaex&lT *75-77 £89
13-Jj.C. 6i% 1976 £96*
G.L.C. 9,5, *8M2 £109
Berta. 5lt TMJ £33
•70-74 £95%
Tl-75 £BSS
BO-84 £108%-%
*71-72 £99 ^
..IMS £84
L.C.C. 6iX 1974 £99%
i-C.C. 5i 80-81 £75%
L.C.C.Cjt *88-98 £81%
L.C.C.+t 20 Aft £51%
Minch. 6* 73.74 £97% . _
M'aei.GJi 75-77 £93% -■■
Vwc'tl ht* 73-76 £931? + %
Surrey 6i 78-89 £85% ~%
French WC A"
GalUfd Bmdly
GaJllfonl Eet_
B% GliM»n.M-J.
33 GhwopWfeJ
NSpwua Orr-
Gunn A.
ifl-V.T.Gronp.
Hahn H Mis-.
Hnrrtmwi •'....
Han Builders
.Uarro* Plant
iHansha*--..
HplIdaJ Kur. . .
HewlenStnart
.Herw'd Wma.
Htawft Hill..
HoHi* Bron.i.
Borer Gravel
Hover liJLV.
l.D.C.
hsr>jck.Tn«n-.
-ntern’l Paint
fomlTunftCD
,Irxftii>I S.— ■
Maekaon D.T..
•l.i nea B. O—
.jin it is .
un baron C. B_
|J»blWOD-Kicft.
Kelwr Vn'gta
Kf no pair's-...
Mer i „
Lai am
f*lnc J.'A*...
lAtham -T
Lend Indus. -
LcylRnrt Paint
Lifisr F.J.C.
l.immor RMk,
Lrunlrin Briolc
IjlVrll. Y..1...
MatThera'n D.
Manet Join.
MalllosOD W..
Man-AMI ....
Mnnilem
MnrcbiraM.,...
M.irier
Mnyft HflmeJI
Mcijeau. J— ..
McManus
Maaia Kron...
31 rilie fnd’s
Merer. M.L..
'Miller. 1»
Mltchril Cntw.
Mlxft'iKnvte..
Mud, Ew. Br.
Vnali *A*
Slowlcm.
99
14
2BC
LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE
109
41.
67
124
1C7
741?
+ 1
+ a
Account: July 12-JuIy 23. Fay Day: August 3. Bargains Marked: 13,653
Rises: 603. Fails: 344. Unchanged: 1,140. Dollar Premium: 24 p.c. ( + | p.c.)
F.T. STOCK INDICES, JULY 22
1971
|r-dsx H'cH Low
403-7 —1*3 *4 1 5 i 305*
+ 0 02 75 7-4 68-
+ 0-7 61'3 ?2
-C 02 74 77 6°*
— 0*01 5*36 3-
+ 0 02 7-34 5*'
FINANCLAL TRUSTS
Prion + ■
Indusf. Ord.
Govt. Secs.
Gold Mines
Fixed Int*.
Ord. Div.
Earn. Yd,
4U
148
42%
IB
as
40
94
44
46
24%
130
105
ua
133
M2
7+99
53*9
74*52
3-SQ
5-90
+ i
13
Vi
218
-2
+ 2
140
la4.
41)1?
117
IS'
1 IB
:s
£8
+ 6
+ a
-l
+ ?
-1-3
- 1
SOI?
1/17
40“
SIS’
6 f
50
59
3- 9
102' 5
&M*
44
15
48
45
48
26
200
*2
+ l
.4-3
-l
+ 8
+ 2
+ 8
+ 1
IS'? I Muck low A...
99
101
246
99
106
S3
212 *
lie
59
- 1
-2
-%
N.itSl«r Brick
Newm nTnka
N K. Tirah^r.
North'n Ltevel
Noraeet RoW.
PirhurTImlnr
Park loan Sir L J3S
rthimixTlmbr 65
Pretoria Oem. 2is
K-M.l* 129
Holland 991?
Heal A Malllk
r-eeran. V .X..
+ 7
+ %
| JtIHiar'-lB WaJj
DOMINION STOCKS
£93%
£35%
£98
£70
£76%
£951?
£«%
£ 86 %
£*$h
£70%
£7012
£0
££6
£45
£iS
£ 7»i?
£B4%
£7&
£86%
£67
£69'?,
£W'j
£S
£77%
£Mi?
£67'?
£83
£36
£25
£24
1970-75 £88
1973- 74 £91
1976-79. £8r>l?
1974- 76 £04%
1380-84 £99i,
1376-78 £75%
Beliru Adb
KoiiphiLilitt ..
I low] Ioann Cat
iiubemlil
Rrnrhyt'ement isa'i
Kvcrr-rt Brad. 57i?
^.hah^Tlmher Dai*
111?
50
80
5a
60
25
77
+ 1
4-2
4-1?
•'-O. lit izno-iO HIM +1; '
N-ji. 43t 1970-73 £M% -I;
J /- 5^ 1F7BJH £75%
g.K- X9T6JS0 £86
NX 74 X iwtas £85
h-Ub.St 1978-61 £69
N'»aM6X19W£l £«9
,?+ir- 34% 1974-78 £90
'S.i.'HAl 19* TD £51
.SJIHri^jlaBT.Te £40
te.£H. 6* ,1976-79 £56
£»
£271 3
£M
£94
£M. .
£3'?
£%
740
£100
£3H
£103'
£21
£51
JE41
J38
£S2i*
1M
£34
£7}
£63%
FOREIGN STOCKS
£50
£12'?
£7
£86
£SS
£ 1 %
£2
£98
550
£99
£133
£101
£301?
£32';
£501?
U .Are. Inn. El
Ajat'fnm Ord ..
jAnlTcM Pref-
Berlln 4% ..
Chile 5X ...... :.
XJta*. i* 19B..
Pt Buier
Colocae £4^%A.
£ 12 %
S56%
2671;
SJJe.
£28%
92'?
£30
£69
£10
50
£61?
163
215
£5
£ 22 %
.Crun'erri
prasii! „
feyflRfc H9°
tireelr 7* I.*ei ..
Greek blah A.
Guar * Q. A.'..
Bam, W. 44* A.
Benda Mnlnr...
Huiesut 4*....
loetan.iwr — .
K u mania 4 ^ ...
goia Ylaeoea....
Thysf
-ranen Aoe. ..
Brumur
VoUcenacan .... £24
DOLLAR STOCKS
■QOJeiA/can. Alum....
‘^hoaf.
Ln.
Alcan. . _
Alitpma Steel
A. *15. A. F. In.
Bk. nr Montrenl ._
S k !.‘Ji K.itejiia £13%
Bell Telephone. £25%
£10'?
£99'?
£90
646
SSJ 1 *
+ »4
420
±i
4%
£ 11 %
■fia 5 !) -f-'r
975 +17
369 +7
4ii’* + 1 *
£52 +l?
108 -
933
t?7
Beth. SteeL ....
Bow Taller.....
Bmacan,
BP Oil It Gnu "
‘ ao. Imperial ..
Can. Pac-Ord..
; do. 4* prof....
iJannl. JRau"pb,.
lOlonpllIar-.... £25tf" +%
n-DcdSie.... 800 +u>
bat tan. - £4b*« +i*
£141? -%
_ ZTnob.. £1630 —%
Pont £73 +%
BlltaUo - £19% — %
GUI OIL- £12% +%
H 5*onBar.." £10 +i»
saui
wS^'ss {Jf ||
{nL Hoidhwa... 74 b . _
HSjarVffi:- +a
PadOc Pet* ....
Pgw N.Y.O....
4iJB Group...
Kooubh H'iub
.■‘lia'pe&FIsb'r
IhbellnhBir....
Wlmm* Cooke
pouthemOuns
KraHhem* ....
ptnpbenmii-..
btrecters
Summers o^x
bymea. A. £...
(Tarmac
ITarlor Wood.
.'Illumes Pip’d
Jjll -iirr Coil..
nrsilg&ara'd
ITT'ISCOO
(Tanneil *S\.„
iTnrrifif
i'wrfiirdn .....
Old. Builders.
V al do Travers
'-ale Tfaua.....
lantmard Pit.
Varner Hklna.
Vretli Kione. .
WardteArtbur
) Blake..
Malta 1
WcRtUr'k Pr'd
'vetiern Bros.
Mbnillnm....
M ilaon Con*r.
Mbuper a....
140
36
72
1441?
119
330
108
166
1(77
65
135
U0
515
178
14
42
144
ia
479
173
96
IS
176
79
91%
me
ia
450
* .
133
mo
135
96
416
357
151
U0
801?
70
145
£U%
BREWERIES
E|s (Allied Brew... I31V
4% I A nuU. Distil It. 34
Ag.Bl. Mils'.. 71
BasaCbsmou 123
Moddlnptona.. 110
Biwn.Mtheir 355
Kiilxuer. B. P. 68*
!caairMti,.r.w 154
CltjuriiiDdon 106
.C lark. Mat. .. 60
Courage 125
llaranplsC.B. ISO
DBcenlah.JA. 505
Ola tillers 161
Ellis* C-o 11%
Bum Wine.. .. 59
(deni i »et .... 142
Greenall Whit 165
Grwnet Klne. 463*
' -'lirul&M 184
HardrsiElml 90
Hudiiand Dial 150
Bull 166
int. DEstfUen 74
lane John .. 69
.VafnThmpen 90
INindeman
45
«:
112
79
46
BTI?
ITS'?
375
125%
10
35
122
370
129
721?
125 -
115
57
65
58%
122
317%
69%
78
216%
96%
63%
175
S3
90%
1771*
52
56
83%
765
+ 1 ?
- 1
+ 5
So;.llhh * N : e 437
A-\. Brxnrs ..
A-A. Wines ..
jTulkmaeba"”
rromalin
nruman Hno.
taus & Assoc.
+ 8
-i
WAovvMaiin
WtUamsAHt. .
iWolrerhmtUn
IVounc A* ....
CHEMICALS
PLASTICS
&
540
£17%
235
71
370
775
U* 0 - S n
3t-i'p Hoot. no
[Toronto * D — £12%
+ 8
fffly T-]5n— . 6io ...
Hiwlirorth .... £241? -1*
£59 +1-
SSMJC ...
RANKS, DISCOUNT, HP
390
31
315
4TS
600
£38
58
105
166
£35
60
315
81
57b
111
345
119
23
(80
17.
1(4
314
1£.1?
3%
£14*
2P0
395
iU
440
350
144
573
290
U5
£15
199
K6
530
75
195
355
I*
144
561
ia
056
JB0
68
57b
ZB
297
3S6*
?®!'2 (Alesanderj .
lAUea Hvr*B 510
Killed Irish. .. 487
200
MO
390
au
U9
1U
337'?
375
SS Are. Latham. 305
vw AustralttN.ii. 272
n g 1 ^®! Ireland. 380
^ Bfjik Lomnl.. si
S. KSW 335
SI? gtofSonUMd 475
gavdjra.,--. 674
Bare bur« I»CO 020
lRrtf t Hi M A rJPn 49
gfft.BtConL 100
gt. Debt 158
Brown ttblpiajr 320
uryanston.... 67
Lnwir ftjnler.. 305
tjdw Htdcs.. 81
Cl I re Bids*... 670
Igjm. ofAnet. Ill
Dalton Barton 345
FiAtSKni: IS
Mse.*!*
HOI. NuuneL.
HCldB*- LrOUP. BH-T»
. Isrnej BriUsft. 200
weanel Torn... 595
■iMwph. Leo- 245
AlnyhShajcnn 320
KVdowTC Ben. 133
Ltards 552
LlordshBnlaa 355
L^rd-S Soot 104
Lon* On tr. Sea
Mercantile Cr.
MFIfiFT See..
M1>1Ib?iiI ......
Mrtj'Uer.Vspjts
.MiinfJtrn Tut.,
-3
875
u
64
105
M
40
216
a
310
94
218%
86 %
1961?
605
£ 121 ?
7a
950
165
275
iE*
280
250
73
311%
an
86 %
in
140
UB
286%
650?
Hi
as
ISO
mu
323%
185
176'?
212 %
40
412%
97
191%
125
SOD
510
129%
101 %
-19
-14
-3
—IS
+ a
-10
+ 1
+is
AFTER Wednesday's reaction on
continued profit-taking by profes-
sional operators, the industrial
sections of London stock markets
quickly regained their poise yes-
terday as public Investment interest
was stimulated by further consider-
ation of the Chancellor’s mini-
Bud get.
Best prices were not always
maintained, but the final tone was
quite satisfactory and the Financial
Times Ordinary share index, 3-0
higher at noon, ended 1-3 up on
balance at 405-7. Activity was
again encouraged by events on the
takeover front and by the con-
tinued flow of mainly ' favourable
company news.
Leading hanks were again sub-
jected to heavy profit-taking and,
despite expectations of satisfactory
interim statements from Lloyds and
Midland (both due to report today),
prices suffered further sharp losses.
Barclays ended 19 down at 574p.
Lloyds 11 lower at 552p, Midland
33 off at 516p, and National Provin-
cial easier at 572p.
The Bank of England's state-
ment on new rules for the discount
market caused ao adverse-, ripples
in discount house issues. On the
contrary, Garrard and National
were strong at 880p, up 25, while
Clive Holdings ended 15 up at 570p
on vague suggestFons of imminent
takeover moves. Elsewhere in finan-
cials, First National Finance ended
4 down at 326p, after 324p, on the
Spey finance deal.
Business in British Government
securities left much to be desired,
but small buyers predominated and
price changes were usually in
favour of holders. Among the
longs." Funding 6 p.(L. 3993. rose
to £ 74 3 4 , before closing better on
balance at £74 J 2 . while Treasury
9 p.c. 1994, held a rise oF 3 n to £99.
Undated War Loan 3 1 * p.c. was
harder at £38 s g. Dealings started in
Northampton Corporation 8 p.c_
1978-79, at 1/16 discount on the
issue price oF £100, £10 paid.
Truman Hanbury held at 41 6p
pending the final outcome of the
Grand Metropolitan HoteTs/Watnev
Mann bid situation. DistiDera met
Equities rally as
banks
ra
run
mto
heavy profit-taking
investment support at lfilp, a rise
of 4, while Vaux and Associated
advanced 7 to 357p in response to
the results.
Still reflecting the property sale
developments, Phoenix Timber rose
7 more to 65p, after 67p. Chamber-
lain Group were also firm at 61 p
(up 6 ) on hopes in connection with
the compands property interests.
Imperial Chemical Industries, a
firm market during normal busi-
ness hours, made further headway
after the official dose of the market
and ended 9 points up at 314p.
Other “blue chips” to meet soJid
investment support included
Conrtaulds, at 125 ] 2 p, Beecbam
Group, at 342p. Dunlop, at 14Gp.
and Unilever, at 322p, against the
trend.
British-American Tobacco fell 11
to o64p. GaHaher, whose interim re-
port is due today, jumped to 14Ip
on sudden demand before closing
4 better on the day at 157p.
The poor results from George
Kent had a predictable effect on
the company’s share price 4 ! — the
Ordinary dropped to 75p and the
deferred to 60p — but buyers quickly
took advantage of the market situ-
ation and the final quotations were
90p and 65p, losses of 3p and lOp
respectively. Bovrii kept firm at
371 p as dealers again suggested
that Cavenham Foods would ‘‘come
again" to counter the offer from.
Rowntree Mackintosh.
An item in The Daily Telegraph
suggesting that Management
Agency and Music is interested in
making a bid for Pleasurama leFt
the latter’s shares 6 points up at
6 op, after 67p. There was a good
recovery in Trust Honses/Forte, 10
U P 1 ^ 6 p, after 128p. on demand
ahead of Monday's interim figures.
revised offer from British
Vita left Miles Redfern 7 higher at
9fp. Wharf Holdings were again
active pending the expected take-
over offer from Sterling Guarantee
and dosed 4 up at 252 P . British
Lion, a relatively neglected market
a * 40p a Few days ago, jumped an-
other io points to 70p on renewed
bid speculation.
Hofliday Group rose 7 points to
45p on the increased dividend and
Profits, _ while other notably firm
spots included Falrev, at
Tomkinsons Holdings, 'at 90p,“and
G.H.P. Group, at 112p.
Tlie results from Thorn Electri-
f * 1 judged satisfactory and
iSa n shares 3 higher at
«Up. Stock shortage influenced a
advance in BSR. 16 U p at
369p while G E C rose 5 to I50p..
Crabtree Electrical 9 to 157 P . and
Aerradite 3’a to SUap.
Engineers were fea-tured bv a
Tatereaction in Metal Box, 23 down
at oBOp, after the statement at the
annual meeting. Profit-iaking left
T. Koboison 10 down at 33n. and
Tube Investments. 5 lower at 428p
but Cooper Industries improved to
«P. on the record profits and in-
creased dividends.
In the food section. Tate and
Lyle dropped 10 to 14Bp. on siting
after .the interim report, but F M C
met demand at 33p. a ri?e of 3 in-
surances again presented a mixed
appearance, with Eagle Star a dull
market at 422. down 10. On the
bther hand. jHinet Holdings jumped
22 to o 68 p. Leslie and Godwin 8
to 420 o and Sedgwick Collins 8 to
240p.
Increasing optimism about pros-
pects for Lockheed and the Rolls-
Royce engine contract encouraged
demand for the RR crcdilnr com-
panies. Ari.-ing from this, there
was a bear squeeze in J. Luras,
which jumped 16 points fe 2o9p.
Daniel Doncaster rose to 48p and
Smiths Industries to 138p.
British Leyland rose I 3 *
on further consideration
mini-budget and its possible affects
on car sales. Automotive products
rose another 30 points to 71^p. o*n
continued demand in a very re-
,VI"i>lon
\rz &ili Lint.
A i mi. .\«nr....
K.nb BRA'C.
H.K.I*
Bnmilricir....
/.Iwrlbw Grp.
ilftlluntr
51 - fltrikuc
||'.i Ai*«>n li»v.
*K«|.<"nln i'O.
IHi/eiv lnr...
jll.nrliD ...
1 1 it-'li'.-al*’.- ------
I n- ■ K4 Fin A la
+ 's
PLANTATIONS ^ „
l u~\ *** ^
***
60
30
+ 3
4% Hntf.
1.0.1*. Lilt.
I ll.n I Mull 1-
.-I SviS....
Kuiilin
I UV l'---l"*ll..,,
N Jf.i."
I’-i.in-iii ^ —
f.-nili IMnl— -
M'-riln'j '-nar.
- nr ....
w .-'-m ToJ--
H ocwlBall r*
**: lAheifhvInVlB.
89 -imalBB'aa’cd
18*j i.Ufam A Ai’-i.
CT |A T«n»ar9
4S_ jAArkun Frout'r
15'; ilcrtl'lt ilqu'r
15% iBritlab la-lMn
, 8 % iliuki: MrruL.
16 . jt astir-fle^f..,.
UP'S (CwlwlflAPL
45 rZiuhn
13% nn« S.Ortk... . . .
ms iC«Li T f Lied £62* .
S7I? il^nc";!m2.... S7
38 (Dcim'il Si _
65 UQahula Val., 38. ^
81% ilftuZ Dcrsis— . Ho
14'? lEnit .iBfcatla. is
? rKltyiUnRBlir _li
69 ' -
5
20
116* C
M .
i'*i
+%
199 Unity, -'v... 2«i
52% L'ohlcn Hnp?_ Mi, L
160 Girtirl^ Corn. 2M _
255- Fli-di'd* &kov 35% -
51% ilt'ifnss* Val...
12 ilitnitnhner.
57 .lotjii Tw. —
81 Inn- haul ...
aa
IT
*4
73
INVESTMENT TRUSTS
to 45' = p
of the
w-liiie York
better at 123p
results.
rireerfiil mood.
6 poiufs nppear-
stricted market.
Trailer were 10
after the interim
Stores were in
with gains of 3 or
ins in Marks and Spencer, at
44Sp. British Home at 23 Ip. and
Boots, at 213p. Hardy ffurnisher?)
advanced 10 io 123p.
attracted more interest
late and notable sains
in F. S. GednJH. at 3B+p,
CoTMTsDidatcd Gold Fields, at 23fip.
Anglo-American Corpora lion, at
358 p. Consol Water! Gold Fields, at
23fip. Anglo-American Corporation,
at 338p. and El oof. at 259>p.
Ordinary
Kaffirs
than of
occurred
Tailpiece
SHAREHOLDERS in Settle Speak-
man should know their fate today
when Eastern and General Invest-
ment i<= evpectpd tn declare it* lake-
over offer unconditinnal. E. and G.
is now judged to have acquired
over 50 p.c. nF Settle Sped km an.
hence t hp market judgment tha! a
statement is imm'iien.t. At last
night’s prim of 4?.p lor E. and G-,
the iVTcr for SP ^ «orth .‘*J2p,
compared «*iih vesierdav's closing
quotation of 295p.
.\Jluunv In?..
Alli.ino- Tmut
A nale Am sy-iTS
Afli'tOwu
\ i Lt. EI.-Vi~.-n
Hai* Hail
HistloWrtr Pi'
Uni- .WMxT.
Bnr.KmpIr^S
Krlt.lDilxi.li.-n
Brit. Tnrort...
• al.l* Tmrt...
i. Oh'.lfaii.'IU T.
( Linn uSt lows
« *:inlin.iir»rl.|.
CJuirterbfe In.
Cityi.IlTsimvh
lily m miurd
i ijlnni-il Swrst
I'nlMiftil Trill,
i oiiMtvlin urt.
l.oi),li-(ln ’A'..
•Hi.x Jn<I.T/t .
|Th-rhrlRi£i.p. I
•rl.i'J r^l lu. :
hiwl 7 .;si ('.in. i
I»ibiIic. 4 Inc.
K-liiiA- L'lin-I.-' I
Kli.vi rvnlc I'lr.
KkV I II l. ic t.
Km nil r 1 im... 1
Bdl.tl.- i.'llll-M e
K.'.irku nlr I*, l
^».lr.4 ( o', ior l
i->onu>.-e:rili.
*J<*n 1ft, :iHOri i
"llt^Iiur ill?.. 1
Oly I ii- 1
OniViAm IiiTh
L’ iufnli:m 111 v.
Uam'iroK "A'— 1
fl»ren« lnv..
Hill. liiHlri.— li
Hunr.' Uklm A l
I liiUaftOi-nTr. II
ln,ijstTr.i.*<iii. I*
IrfikcVk-wTst 11
LysjJ'.'DhnJI^tr
-It?
B call Lnu pax
it -j 'Kullni
3C-? !L.*in!i.i Plants.
58 jlANODTra.... *
55 IFahiiI. A.^iJc:'
1 V« ■iatfhl.Snni'Ln
ITT jL»«i?hi.iini“ „
5o il.niiura .......
51% l *M.*t,iih....... M
li'-l
15 ilia 'a 73 i3«n;.; .
12 % 'llai-yalam....
Sfit* IMcLcwt Ec«s(-
11 % i 'Ii-rihiiim-tVb
49 .linr-n
21 Niytsvai
21. ;Sf«bE!iii
#-
17
150
30
68
33
18
19
L5%
Uu
-s
+ 1
i*:» hiraih*
5i-i ;lV_L'ti-r
‘ PI*in.-**ietiH_
itnS. irf.imst.
[•^•"Sirn lalla
-.-.'rkiel .....
- trails ilufti.E.
i - i •‘-•run....
I ir .»-i«aip»...
j»\.‘**r-iiL*.jN>r
lu.iib-a i'ea—
I IV ii!i.iMi~'in £
18%
M
32
26
Z5
23t,
41%
36
M
17
1P3
11 %
BQ
69
-l
TEXTILES
&
S8%
* 8 %
68
JJ
1 -
+ 1
>3!,
SI
CS
o3
- r <5
H3
■i
I . on Alvrclunl' 10 T
ELECTRICAL & RADIO
ftUxsfc
Sunk
Prlfla + nr
Prt-« + nr
paaE;
EES*
wEbi
•jnlTem
beeca Ord*]'.
D«»a - A*. _..
P^wbarst Ord
OMvhiinrt "A*.
Dun plea
DonrmSniUiA
J/reaniIiiii«I ...
uhlier
-U?
|l«r K«lrla‘i
IM. R. Eli
m
Elwnrto 194
raa*. is
Mnlrbead 63
Newman Inda 81
NewmarkL... Ifl3
Vorinand Elen SO
B40
Intel ‘A* 885-
jPlawer m
Drw«ar 90
Pm Optiona.. I8i?
liaosl'j.IrcU.. 146
KedlSuidon— . 89
TJcjtoUu. Par. 164
. Sob'aon Bent 476"
Botprflei 84
jSchnlei'O.'ff 340
Areinoa, i.. M
Aiili A Lacy...
-Ww-Edk....
% Aaron.
Actho. Leisure
% Ausnc. Mane..
. AnuKStprarnrn
. Aiklnan imiaa
. Aurora Gear..
% Austin Ball
Averjrs_.
Avonmlh Enc
Amn RnMirc.
Ayrshire llel.
MBA Group...
BJI -1>. Bncm.
BTR xiejiamL
Babcock A W.
Baird, Wni....
Bauer Parkins
Balfour At Uar.
B'nb’rrHIdrM.
? Barclay Secs.. .
* Burnet. 1
Bariov Rind.. .
Barrfc Wal *A*
l Barrow Hepti.
Barton A Suns
Bath A Port'd
Baxter Bell
£ BenaBin Clark I
Beautllltr J
Beccliain l
Bccim.ui Bollr.
tfellalrlW....
Bcnenns IntL J
BenUma
Berlwfrjril4 ....
ss®!*" .
BlBfi"?
.
Bbtkeys
Blues MnoftEl
-1
+ B
i|SCT"
Stock
Prtc* + nr
Slii-l
S% Ewvr. Geo 18.
,52- E-rawdedM.. so
Kite|_ 130
13 lalrh’nLaWn 15
U5 FaL»y_ 302
,32% P»dex 41
147 1-eUzMawvD‘k 386
Penm-r.J^L.. 167
ft, fsrA*: 18
14 HinlayW B'trt 19
3? Firth Brown.. 140
n Firth Ctevel'd 127
n*vsLS 64
«% Hemlns. AJ. 76
,54 Plesnllfl 86
173 Klnldrtre 320
68% Pocarty. E-.. 88
11% Follies. •hpf'V 18
IB Fimkco MJns'p 149
2 Fotbenrill At U 86
£ FranclK luds.. 27%
46'? Krlenl nd Taw 60
«C ij. R. i Hold us) 2D0
40 Gala Cosmetic 70
101% Gall sain mp A 146
40 'Tasbell *Chra 45
46'- General It £.1, 64
19i- Gcr Bl A Meoh 44
91? GenBueiRodi 16
15 •■eststner "A*. 188
40 LlWions. B.... *4
15 Gill A iSiifns. 149
45% GlnaBeld Sees. 366
B Gjimii Meral. Ml-
SI i.latn Group- 386
® GlyiiWed^ 166
S% Goblin 47
10 uiuime Hides 177
16'? i: rani on Hlibm 45
»% lirmlMi't BMs 190
*% iirusieriun A' 350
GL NthnTels. £15%
S'? Greaysx b Ta. 89
0 Graeninc. N.. 44
• UU. Trust. B6
iGrlpnsroila.... 53
I'rlc-
+ 4
-1
-%
- 1
+ A
Mnmitrpe 134
Moman Cm... 132
Morris HsrhL. 42
Jlurs Knc 58
■'101 Ives so
SI i ,,lrr V. n w - ^
,6% Jlua. k t’l ia .. 12%
1P8% \lrmqi Group. 142
Nairn -v Will- 97
Nathan R. * |. 92
Nai. Cnrl.'piT 177
Nat. Sun Ijwly 28',
Neepsend 119
Anvii/'A* 26
Neill -In i lies... 152
Newton i.'hnm 70
Norlnirr lus.. 213
Norrnjs IM
N/irtreii Ship. 116
'"mi Warm- 13%
Ninth .1 42
North M. K.... 70
Norton. W. E. 10%
Nn-riwfit ...... 7.1
Nurtall \Vni.
Ocean «
UOiee A
wire i
(•ft Bajoiar *A*
'-•alKirn .-*
liSUi 1 '" 1 ; 1 . 1 .™
FarkerKnollA
T...
+ 1
T 1
+ U'
Paul. \\
nisi Wins,
'•■tars Hull-
Perak B. a yd.
Peters G. D...
Phfllilack
Phillips parts
llnrs# ,
Brady. G.
R railway
»' '
Brt
DRAPERY & STORES
FOOD
118
+ 3
8S0
aaa
IPS
308
135’
4%
-4
+S
+ 3
-%
-%
+ 6
— 5
“10
+ 3
“11
-IS
NatSurfndlay 355
ISO
186
200
516
67
182
- 5
- 1
+ 2
-13
-11
&iiL-\iut ralaa
[Naf.t’r.m.Grp.
'Nal.Meatmtr.
O'tean Fin. Tit
Pro*. Cloth...
Ren Brat *A*..
t ra Seen...
lore ......
tr & h*ried __
r Wnlbor 287
IMnltb 8 t. Ahn. 146
Ntin-J & Chart 350
J-niitn Diw.nL Sfis’
Pn- rv»m. 1 st. 158
iui% iMaeon Finao. ic 4
68 % lM intrust 109t
137
144
672
ZKO
348
285
68
550
324
+ 3
-9
as
970
se
81
299
99
as
.48%
112
14
107%
771?
U4
62
371
167
122
193
39
S’*
87
9S
US
118
IB
671?
»
SB
la
3
S'*
63
BG
63
129
27%
66
i5
-10
+ 4
+ S
-6
— 2
- 5
- 4
T 1
BUILDING & ROADS
133
SO
92%
163
107%
40%
X
4C
169%
169
t3
lb
84
66
66
35
AS
67
140
£fi
46
§ 01 ?
17J
41%
UG
73
16
65
37
35
46
rc
1 J 8
77%
15
&
ITU-
12 %
77
51%
ill?
2 B%
90
50
13%
59%
120
90
51
54
29
Ml 1 .'
103%
51
181?
43
.65
44
16%
19
41
138%
39
35
44
.14
a
17
an?
35*
33%
U
as
4i
44
24%
63%
53%
77%
55
Ji
39%
90%
3b%
,0
PI*
115
20
30u
Aberriwn O’ns
Amur Group-
.Vnultajts Shha
'Ass. Cembnt..
Atlas 6tone...
Baca I
Bafley. Ben. ..
Bainl*er?e™ ..
Belt Bros.....
n'hin. Pallet-
.Ktand -1
Blm.rtreteAcc
Bltuxlell Prm.
UnviM..
B.P.B. Inda...
Breudnu Ci'iL.
Bristol Plant.
OH'. Hn-rfee..
Brown fclcJtfth
Bryant Hil*.%.
i'ii ln’ii ■( i:.*a’
ChiUBsijin Mp..
, Charles D
(•burelim.Sm.
Clark it Keon.
'.'oinhcn WMa
ICpncrete ......
Cooatalile Hrl
Costal u H
Cox H
.Crest Emu rs.
|CnidsleyBKb-
Croncti Group
iCrowther, W.
UnldifdiDs....
Dare Estate..
DeanSmlth...
r«»*G...'.
riouilw A. M.
DnwninE G.ft
Dnirj* EJdia.,
Ini ray- B:t ....
GIlisA-fiveMPl
lia-'. i.'liMn ci.
firltli i *.i»....
F. C. Ciiim: rl
F _l‘ A. full*
r.iireliiii'Ii L.
IKFJUiC.Bi....
U iucll B
101
B 8
87
380
' 152
82
sa
SO
150
85
39
90
39
ieo
163*
89
11
77
68
55
25 ■*
S3
64
137%
56
- 1 %
+ 1
-1
-1
193
£ 21 ?
363
aoo
136
534
US'?
Da
63
365
84%
47
sa
£!%
79
78
141?
ft
ht
32
94
60
14%
131
291
120
110
510
45
L&S
52%
IS
71
US'
204
44
12 %
155
16
m
31
57
206U
42%
181L
36%
!G><
J'i
81
53L
80
37%
173%
110
75
132%
29%
51%
49
67
78%
73%
107%
48
45%
40
9Q
W**
^'4
37
100
3V«
40
19
152%
42%
B?%
118%
65
- 1
& CATERING
Ailaaia Butter 20
Alld rsipDcm £48 —4
AnpUnn Foods 47*
AjutusHtenkH 72
Ass-d Biscuits 288 —a
A. B. Foods... 56% —1%
Assoo. roirlea —
Anne. Pish. ..
Assoc. Foods. .
Arana Group.
Bassett U
Baxters Bcbrs
BorisTpISA tv
Kiihrttwstores
BovriL
Bowersj Wllsi
Brierley Smkt
British ditcai'.
Bl VenilftK..
JBrnpkeBoiiitB
(cadbix Scbwp
i>T«nhani FtL
1 litforri lUra
Mu&h DnlrsA
'i Whnin Grp..
+ 1
+ 1
a lAonaacritni'A'
« ArmyASavy.
s Bensona Boa-
Baualls
i Btcklcr. Jm,,
• Bo'rdnioMrdn
Boots Ure...
i uournn % Holl
; Bremner -....
i BritJSonis Str 251t
i Buckingham.. 18%
Burton Group 268
Burton Grp'A’ 257
t Collet, .r
i Collier. S
i ComfaJInc^tr
! E 22 £,*Watls
tonrt Bros ‘A'
Cuatonunlc —
Delienhams ..
Dennta tfcy...
Dinide, K
rjliona Photo.
Dixons Ph.* A*
Ellta * Gi.hna ..
Empire Stores 500
KiirliiinK .... sea
Poster Bros... 178
J- reeiuana 144
Heller A. J.... 45
Goldliers 1221
, .,i>j«imanBrns 17
'■raUjin Ware £92
Jjtev Alillettf.. 48
Hrt.PnJr.sim, H50
GLLnlratrs A 421
Hnltrius
Brit. _
Bril Ac
BriL
Brit. J
Brit.
Brit. Match...
Brit Oxrcm-
Brit. EuQtnkr.
BriL Ropes...
SMfet
¥&£&
Brit. Tar
BriL Tool * P
Krlt. Vita
Brnokhonss...
Brooks Gro...
BrknQIll Pits
B rooLKt.Bnr.
Kruobe Tiiol..
+10
+%
-1
+%
+ 5
+ 4
+ 4
60'?* + 3
8 +%
481? +1%
10 %
188
18
225 +a
24
1
BG +2
85 +2
gais?^
+ 6
-8
+ 3
86
ES%
B':
1 KL
65
C
42
14
55
60
15
65
136
7
42
70
35
10
44
a-
23
160
30
168.
73
57
65
24
10
40 .
83
74
138
54
19
61
115
IDS
136
98
54
Ml
96
76U
387
22
93
27
119
a%
T9%
120 %
-30
8
45
63%
72%
80
26 .
KostiroraU-B.
K-lwanta Ls. C
iK^wdaMouaL
.Fitch Loro'll"
Gateway SscA
Gtiliicn Bk .
GnldreiFnn'W
Hinton. Amoa
Haxnrlare
HiileUn Hoar
Jnt.Btores....
Ktnlo-.'k
ftwik &re..„
Lennofui
Ly-nsJ -A*..
Manbre ft Gtn
Uar [oft Frnco
MatLbcws Hlil
tlnyTMnls
ileal Trdefinp
Melba
Mills A. J
Monies Stores
Mon-la ftD-I'a
Morrison Wo
ML Chariot te.
- 1
unllnftPn'K 172
^rk CokeBaft 10
Patereon. R — 61*
'PklViochTod 84
Pnceriw 84
BlsJm«n;Llyri 12
Tlanloi Buried 1£G
UcAlWftCoL 281
Btchnnlpn *.\* 120
noh’ihlFas'Er 87
Itownirer 3Ch 510
S. ft K. fflrlnt. 44*;
SoiU Meat.... 153
Snlltare 51%
Tau* ft Lyle... !■*«
Tn*)-. 69%
I'nisats >13
ntri. Bwccdti. 304
[tpwardftlUch 42
Mailer fturtly ii%
W kills, F. .1... 165
Wal sou A Phil i 102
tVheaLsb'Flnr 131
Wbra-ft-reKeBt SB
WriithLsBlm 44%
Hepw'tlLJ/B- -
Bee- Of rtpror 214
Runic It. Philip is
Lawreacs. P.. 48
41
Lloyds lletall A 40
Lyons ft Lyons 11
Macowanb — SO
Maple ft t-p... ioa
Marss ft Spen. 44 fl
Martin Nms.. 275
Morris ft Biles’ 74
Myere. .1 212
New D?r 35
'•wett Owen.. 60
2rltlaa.il.... isb
Pp«i..i 119
Polly Peek.. .. 31
iQuiwnStivha. |s%
UdUncra.Ieirat S2
’I^y'-ecl M.in. 73%
Reod.A'Blin.. SOS
KlrlhiL Ii.t S S7
fttteeft Co.... 83-
.5- * PjKtorea. 25
teiimel. H 137
bcUncnort.... 16%
PUi.Tluaa...... ig
Istulnivrv 'A'.. 46
roiR’Un 75
IMUrla G 12
b'inineC.ft 31- 50
iJtillH Drapr. >41%
1 unions 3B%
WdRcr.-lai.. B0
ttiHMB. Aaa, 47
HUliamsI'urn 8
W iImih Mnivli
Huol«*urUi.,.
a Brother!
Kruwn ft T'
Bromi Barley 68
! Rrowmlllford 88 _
Hmitn. Jdhn_ 139 —
RnlJniich Sec.. 82* ..
Bure. 1 Dean... 85* ^
Biirress Prod. 82
Kurt Braiiton. 120 ..
1 Burr Masoo.. 49 +11
BnnWsCmo. 52 -
Hutllns 21 % ..
k RutterfdHrvy 38
i Bydand 63
CCL hya urnm. 28
l.lalater Groan 46
Ci fort ta Elec. 47
1. am tori ...... 124
Camrot 145
i.iinnliw. W... 55
< Irons -TG laas
1 *apn .iflhr^toe ]48
Cupper- Neill.. 55
• .irarana Inf 51
i;.inl I'M blits 35
Cdrltua fttla.. 120
Carter Ppnen. 63
t Moi-'tr. J. . 170
1 *aw.<od 134
I VIesI mid Intis 12)
• cni SbcnlT 12^
Central Mfc.. 61
enimMtnfn. m
C entre Hotels
Chain be rhi ftp
+ 5
loll Mathew.
lall-Tnvnm..
Inlllte Hides,
latateul.
5‘? fHamnaonlorta
47. HampUmC'ftJ
+ 1
67
35
106
1 U 0
423
123
60
19%
241 •
SO
280
23
32
348
23S
14%
99
119
146
+ I
+ 1
>» «;.i
I ** IMilh.n,..
I Mii-Uilii
IMne.-n l.'enr,.
1 M.lltr < r...«T
[ ilium 1 1 ll.irr
. 11 I I'li— \V
\i rvrillii H . . . .
I' VII”" riilii
Mimr-r*' tun
VI arn-u. 1
M ,tr» ir-k Rpv-
Mi.|i;w.mhI....
M >'IMinni|l ..
, l.iin. Trust
MurcnnllleJnr
|'l..-rohiini. j IVt
iroiuilunT.
.Vntikii lav
|Neo TbrocCh
’Nib Atlantic;,
■ill ft Attu,<c...
"111 oli uu Held
Premier Dir..
Prhuii lnv. ...
Knlwo FI SO.
l.'olierai FI 5..
JSoluirt. Ihr.
h'ullnco Siih-B
i ii'iini-j Tet..
S'+.-nNor- ft Bl
rentl Inr.Tut.
No*. Nortbrn
Sent Wist In.
SecndKrit .Vas !
Second Cons..
siniMnnlde lav ;
sum- Is pi T*L 1
Sierliu-- Tut... I
SurlniMt
TrieiiluieftGu 1
I i-lii 1 .Io Mar In 1
I hsni’i Inr. ..
Thru 1 j rili Cap 1
Tliroc J«f
TrPiuiuli InT. 2
I'nwlMotorp.. 2
I 'nli .0*0111 nil 1
H !s. ft u. .. 1
I'tii. Itrlr -Vtai. I
MhlllimviUi. 2 !
M(t?n Div 1
Yoniuou 11
1 oris ft Lines
■?1
125% +6'-
3
J 6
1 H%
-*2
4_%
76
10
lii?
16
OIL SHARES
+ 9
+ a
Jlfy! mni Ewr 60
llliarf HI'U's,. 232
W hmlucUHar 117
Uhiidiie 58’
W liilMcrtl Iiyi 90
illnwb'iuseG ll
UilkeM-l |6n
M rlk.>n.|.ilrri SO
M ilk \1‘ 46%
MiJIms ft. hue 19
111 1m.J1C.tn 39
11 lU.Geo.... 53
11 "TN.-wum 1B3
11 inn Iii-Im 27i,
Moll Tools....
Amnol Pelrnt
Ancl-i Koud 'r
Atlivi "n..„
Auet Dll -tiSn
FrlL P-iruM.. .
Brit. Com r* -I.
Iritis li Pi-irol
Ihuruinb i'll
+%
- 1
I gur iqali Harr
+10
>utfti.«n In.
"II
PrviuierO.il*
(••oral Dutch .
Shull l'rauyprt
SlMtt.J.I
Trinidad Ora.
Mitre mar
M&Huir 1 Cent 1
A. 11 -Cl- ....
U! ,'ud I> ;;(:*“
.'*: uu Bro...
l'sri.'. I eiiile
H-sittri. J
Hear Brand...
I'-L'IllUII .......
D'.irknrrt.id V.
n-:roi.Teili:o
l.r. h.. -I
ii"-i_-i.i: r ..jj,
IL.lt ,i»vw*l
Krif. •!!
Krj .ii >i Jr..
1 P.-murv ! r:-i'S
iC-.ne^-s Ji.tiiI
i'irr<.*li}«lla 36-;
ICohim Paioai. 62%
N‘
VinutuiFi...
I *r-«* 1 iRI'sHd.
iCnin tbcr.I -
[1<%VII .1 ....
Deii'n W111...
Eii'-is-r. .1
Km 11 M 1 ml ....
i.nstfr, li*. hIico
I* iinn.%i»»r
F-xrunnrth.l,.
I I wtor. Juira..
U.ieiuut. il
Hitiehinftlvjir
H-.-atb «i. H..
Hcuro. .\ * b.
?4i--t in- P- :jt
Hi-'iil Erw...
HicIluii-
HlrhH;*(ii?p»
Hirst ft Uallin
HvrsiKll..l. L*.
n/ewiirlt iL
In.-riiui. H..—
.lor- . him, S
-linen ic
luto lu-hiAr's
Liqcr -t i'o...
Heflin.- 1 >11. G..
MIDcr V
'lont:V*n. ....
Nvtlilhunr;
Novo -.ler -cr>
Par.% •’>■1.1 Test
P.iMinde
■J-lillll-.-.
liJv.T.Teallle
Kamtr Tax tile
Brodicut
s.nt.r
fruiiw I'urnelo.
>uiallft**t (dm *t
Sultli Huuf'iM
.rfnatRiT.
ptvriin; Knit.
Torn * ‘nnjsiit'e
ll eitnrol .Irsy 132
Tr.idi-pi c.iru
I ml*i
1'nll.utliGroap
l,it»- fct~
W»«
J' * PlllHe..
Mowi B ttenw
Mo! ill mil I tore.
+ 2
il !2
- 1
;9
7.
12 %
4a *
110
20
21
26*
81*
;5
8 U
46*
44
£7%
96
60
316
228
5ns
66
45%
53
VSi
55
12
49
10
37
+ '?
- 1
+U
?.!3l 50
103
a
61
11%
4a%.
-f-4
+ 1
Mur
,«■■* (VOrit t woo 1
1 S*% l^ousluiltariit
70
115
Ml?
fl
168
+ 2
+ 3
,-iw v
+ 2
-7
+ 3
PlcIrtvaMiu'A'
r
PJflKt ic tuna..
Pluiieuraiiia ..
Polymark
Pnnttue
Portals.
Powell Duitn..
Pratt F.
JT*
9><
8-4
323
163
76
65
11
26
100
IDS
48
+ %
-U
-h
+ I
- 1
- I
+ 6
I»«Im Huuh'ea
(••n Bra*.
M •ijvmn.l 'lil..
M "iitlnrell Fd
Woodall I met
M Msnlhsel.'lrn
MnmhtS Mm.
M ri-limn F...
Vitrei Pum..
SfieUcrM
PAPERS & PUBLISHERS
MINING
+ 1
| Alliance Aid..
lAhSuc. Nun: —
lAnuXui Nicer.
a» iA.Aiu.l.-p S.A.
All. Amur, lnv
Ancl.ilunrA
15
353
*+i
nt
+W
&n, tr**
Jrrw....
B -ii«.n. rt. ft.
J;o»nt
760
K 6
258
% +■
+.5
- 3
-8
MOTORS & AIRCRAFT
Hannon Trust
in Bn
+ 3
+ 2
on? 1 _namrxrtn"p
I 15 Icjjatnhcrln Pt»
71
-in
industrials
*73
.LA. 11
A D. lutnl
•Ji'M Syatmri
-I
+% ■
SHOES
+ 1
-1
+%
- 1 ?
+%
«'5 +1%
42
f3% -%
205
43
42
+ 3
-2
«%
U
108
104%
L'%
103
52
50%
£5 .
40
20
<3
67
<4
347
64%
re
x
46
10
16
7b
V
9%
1814
32
40
10
27
37
28 .
144%
33%
33%
15
ie
31 •
& LEATHERS
-1
.Brveln.
BrllUm. G.B..
i.hurah* Co..
Farnjer, J..*.
H eadlam Sim*
K dhwfl— ---•
lumbert. Bill
Lol'M
Meltwr. A.H.
S.S. Frioiwisvr
Newbld ftErtn
K'lfTIf rtliiu. ..
Viitard. I*, ff.
lUrur, H. M-.
StesulftSuil'A
iStylii iShues...
tl'iiniwiin. W m.
Wuirpa.
White. J
Wood. W
+ 4
+ 1
35%
‘•w ,ta5*wb
-'■P.\ , Hhl-jx.
■L\ .P, Iniiun.
Aar><uiMiD Br.*,
A)jnulr>a Int.
Arrow 'A'....
Ailai Ha Ilia t>.
1 Aire. Lauurtn-
Adwent
Alut I'mas,..,
Airflx lad.....
Air 0a N. V...
Alcan IM. L.L
Alien. Edcar..
AlkL Era;. Pu.
Allied luvcsL.
Alljffiswjils .....
Alnjrn Hhlst.
AnioLGIasiSA
Antal. HeiaJ..
Ama l.PoWor..
Ainlwr lulls...
Anderau Mavr
Auln-ruv Kreo
A^.Vui Fibre
Ain. Luiilam- .
AnsinSwiss...
Atielf!mEUm
AoKio«-n*L-..
ArWtt Wa'tn
- I
+ 6
+ 2
a% IfTwnre M
60 [I Tiiwiii^l Ti iiml 64
JB% I fiaiT WU l«ir 48
84 [I'huldi I£2
15% * Im.Pwrls.... 22%
42% • 'iarke Cbao'n 72
32 narfc^u!T!!“ 62
SS% Harksnu IntL 92
971? t'laj* Crocs 116
57 IMIICDGDO 99
a l.nte. |:jj 87
a ' -ill wood Grp 37
1B9 1 «ni. An*ilnS 20S
25-a i.oniptn Wthb 471?
a Ijwmrie.... 83
ffl ..ccsi 'nmmiirt 22%
£, k*>P‘ , r,I'»!us. 85
a% Cnpe .Vilnian- 46%
S i/'l’f’lri 48
«l J.-irul, .1 Hides 70
J,..r>*. Wn. 34 7
JO 1 wirt Holds.. 68
55 Counncr Pp«. 62
4S I. iiuho de t.rL 88
61% I '.roll i ip Fiiiiq, 08
9 li riwtliy .-ijinnu II
£■? 1 r'Mri'-l'i jc i al 35%
a t.*rotrn Hro lq. 341;
ffi I'royrlH liubr 120
10 I.urzoii In.... 14
» Cwy-ns SO
SNa i utli no rt B.G. 39
57 Daraall 75
18 Ihtn-L-.inACn. 23
B I ■acy-Ayhiii'c, 64% .
£ Juwe.nft Ba, 36
S, *•*,!* Kile.... 330
g-4 I wlf.a Ci.ni rofs *7*
g Jklin Metals-. 94%
5 i+ql/raran*. .. 120-
® Deritcr-l Sip., rjs
5 Ikronurtcr 180
f '•erultrl;. iro rg. 530
t - Jbi \ «*.■ Ntl-a.. IM
< Dcxlun 32
3 Uft’UiillMlSlt'L 12
-'i I'olwonlbtrk..
4 Ih'iMiMi'T. D.. 48
B% Hnii!li>n ft C|>. R6I«
D itorrrb'n.'ln.. 27
1 ftoxfur-l K-Siifi 48% -j
J lirakrfti Hint* 55
5 XHirti.V etoris. 144
J IHih a-Cnniliz .“6
[ i I fu Willi Kot.. 12/
? Dunran (Hrok 680
> Hunt ' rift JjllA 41
i 1 5101110 148
! Dnuon 6i
! Enttein Prod, 329 -
> L.Mttsax Km. 120
; K.C.Cauea.... 30
1 r...niii>ni ic Gp. 60 ,
[ Kliwa £2
'*«* Ek»*.i*IndAw 7
Kler. ft tea.. ”
% KIM'itLC
hlliwi lirrmn
Kill,, Ken ....
t tel. i ml. .1. &
Ln.-. 1,-rnl. Cl.
Kims.
fciirrm u Ferr.
l i j Lml
Lvude Hides..
+’;
+10
+ 3
T%
46%
Hardun But..
Hargreaves .. 2*
Harlan*! ft Wlf I
Harrier J...,. i
Harriri ft Shald ■
Hnrrlaon ft Cr 6*
Hartley Croe.. I
Hatterakiy SL lt
Hawthorn. L. .
Hayj Wharf.. 21
Hem! W rfchtn £
Heiudale itrp. £
Henahall. W..
HpwrfbCrnilc 7
HiTt«t. A.... G
Hi.niulr. a.... 9
Hill ftSmflJl.. B
Hill. Mm 8
Hilton. IhUnh 9
Huii num: K.. 18
Holt Products 3
Hunver 47
llimvfr ‘A*.... 47 1
Hnnkliutiiiw... 59-
HnunepiSnrB I;
Hovrrd Tunras 1&
UmwiIisi i;m.. 6*
Hihl«uu iSuhrt 71
numiilirlesric 1‘
Ijunift Moarrp 11
rtiinliiic AfWju 42
InilM UnLiiM 46(
luip.Jleil. (nd 71
(wli-iln ft Lam 87
Imli/mii Clnra 21
InsMiWt....... 14
I lilt h, I -xervlne 7i
Ini. »■. Africa. 15a
1 nt. 1 *,iiuhiii(L 14
Ini. r*. imp, .Mr 141
int. •.■ until. r*a 120
• .'cLh. U in.... 19
.innieR. .inhn.. 28
■ . H ilnidimsi 18
•foir.HiH. K. K. 63
J, nriini- is
-Icvpii 1 '.iniier 70
■sic; Mur.. 93
jliiMin Npph. 328
■ojiu-uin t.'lnrs 82
W'lhMii Maihy 3«7
.[■hi*-, ih 1 pm n 106
'■nitiro. ^1 rouU.
■Iinlue Int
KnD--.il
Ken 1 . T.
Kf-l-rv In.lmi,
Krn. Pal. HU.
Kent 1 .i-.i lni.ro
Nuiii. i,,i. ..
Klrku.ill Fl-u.
Kl|. ii--n Taylr
KiImhh
KI-imb ilid.
K«h- lml
la'IlirnLn ....
jj.ll.i. Pride..
Iaellr*l C iflliip,.
J-nke A LMiiUt
jmiiwn IniL.
[-iuri *n* Kras,
jiiittlretn- In
1-rod at .iilr.11
Ij*Ii|im Hnrrih.
I-**' Arthur...
•All *
Iaii i-rnrup.,..
I^Nlin)'
Lira I, ft li \v
hi.u-s..
Unilinirliro...
I .inci Bros....
Uiirt-.id
!«d«n. I
F. H...
i.Iorilj 1 . Imj?_
I A*>i.-rTh*ic..
l^wLer T *.V . .
I -UA-Vld In I
l.niL A Nun hn
LUC lull
Luiunii'w....
I.uk it Hoi ci r. !
fni'-.ft lift
JI-K. Iiufrlro. 2
41.1.. Hldi.ro.. .
JJ.V. Marl ..
JJrorsmini I j|h 1
Mai-qnhjri (*..
Macrra/lru j|,
Jim. Tii*mmifl
JLitasiul AcL ]
H.iur. llrtiiuc
'larcjiiif
Mark Lin?.,., j
UarkNAIlKiL. 1
Slarlltrr IihIk..
Murrrtll -Siirt
Mfl|ro||i|lh|||r\
Jlarnlial I* Ful. j
M inin Hrick.
Marlin Turn..
Mariim.ilr .... 2
'.M.iniusi droit.
.Mill for ft 1 1s|i 1
.Mi-Ksylf, Lht. :
McKtvhnii* Br
.VoluiiHer...
Melhray j
.Moil I us
Mruliiinrr .... I
Met, I Kot.... 51
M'-liil 1 iiw'rea 11
'Idiilmt 1
Mi'inl 1 railsri 4
'leircuiole luU a
Urihd- 1
Mid I.1B' I limn h
Mldlaud 1 111I1 -
MII01 I 'rue*., fi
Mllw Kedli'Pli li
.Mllli.nl Ua-fc* |
Milo Miumrs* 11
Mliiuv .‘■ui'p.. 16
I.Mil'-liaJI lull? 3
MUdralf fura. 2
'Muon Coul' na H
Li
47
70
■no
SO
IX
f*ri« It Ptcrae 422
"rlicbitnJ cirii
111 li kj
1 £S + I
Pull man
U.H.P.
Kiu linm. Mi-tal
lluuiiull.l. I,.,
liank UM
> itank 'A
» liaiisiiie -inns,
jtc Hearn Nut.
ljmliuxu Hun..
Pewi Raw;....
Beni ild
l.eunlrk W ilL
t^ailiiiiir Grp.
I. 'emenei
l-Vxiuwe
J. 'fi-lLird Brrm.
Mnh. WeMctb
lihuiiiei
1 tiolrert« 1 "hiit.
■•m.-lca-nni tip.
1 l.nBi-r' Giir...
l.'.ajLi ILirrni.
i l. , 'i|'ll>T
[''"tnorlul
Hotair How..
[inwinn fills .
Hoyal ifov IVn
llnynl Wiiit-..
lire 1 *UiKl.- ...
SulcTlln'-v....
SmnU n Film.
Ninilnui K*»sr
^nmlhurst Mk
Sanmy
■^miiuk-ni Vnl.
Favor tin. *.v
SCSI'S
rn'IilroilnueriiiB
■roi'li-nid.
SmiU Invnat..
!ro*"illnlift |i||.
Si-rsuw K
SiMlp.1 Hi. 1 nr.
roan* HMpt A
iromlur Kiurjic,
Serek.
H7
lfH
55
78
22 %
100
46
2MI-
7i0
848
108
113
20
58
553
80
82
90
208
16
58
706
SfiO
58
36
- I
+ 2
154
j5
126
-+‘i
+ 5
+ 5
+ li
+ 1
+ %
+ I
20
+ 3
+ 4
:p + 1 ,
65
122
38
IhO
107
71
725
63
W
127
120
335
67-
+ I
+ S
26
116
14
%
27
14
76
137
i 15
79
110
79
127
3T'.-
2521-
171 ‘
210
a
14%
53%
66
«
230
53
LB
66
H5
735
71
=«
87%
91
73
39
103%
inn
*
it
44
82
3561.
15
69%
an
VI
nu
9t%
34
70
15%
15ro
69
HO
71
278
79
175
63
67
188
13b
4B
112
16$
132-
In
28
M3
63
+ 3
-20
+ 1
-1
4-
1 in
150
4 H%
1-13
1.16
49
, . 59%
Suli re Snc'uiu. 235
Wl*iw. I- 46
iMiaw It.t;. 6i0
5 »’l'lw Kn.. 92
.uliunui.i 1 uu?
nhtppiiur JnilM
SMrtir
Isiulie r.'nriuan
Mleiillili u. ...
I.11.
isill.'iie r.n'.v
Klmnii Bn?ri(.
Slniiwii ri. ‘A’
|Ske|i-||h'r
smith ft Ni-n|]
Smlili K* lip
f-inliliilriil Xu.
If'nrll li I nil ID,.,
ifnilf bs ikii nis
►irarit HMiw.,
ISmtrruwG.W.
S|'d-nr ft .rack.
I'l'unr. .1. \\....
'jceiK-er i-cnra
i!t|"-m-r I’iiuii.
. ,1'ifiiA Snroo..
|S|ilri Ilu
S|h».ner lnd-t.
•Mwcktey t'h.
'Plan Pi. I I itIhs
. si all I'd 16k \V
Siaiicx
[suin' hwl Tj-p?
Sl.irtrlP'
Stiirelur. ......
Brut....
>*t>i4 iron ii>...
Isim.icr
S|e»nrt..U. .
wllJe, G. -.V
SMrti.nil RI'L
Shark na. T.'ln,
s'wklabi* His.
Stmi' lilll
Sl-lie 1*1,111....
'Si-dlu'rtft I’itt.
xmiiuar, 1* ...
snf 1-1 Iiii> Simin
-Swan, lliin-rr
sum] Mairli h
9li« , riimi Si-iv|
iTIi..|imi , | , i Luc
|T lei*r iiiub ...
j llllll?. Tills:..
(Tinii* Proly ..
jTjs-iw Mirlicli
Ti'la-nnli..!!”
, C**—N|tl
|T"; ,' ft 1 ". . .
T'wr Keiiihir
I ran ft rtu'HL
Tniisiiurt t%v
Trciiii-li..
TrUim."
Trljiles klvIrH
*1 nr>i IIK ir'e-
Tula: tin ex'.
Timii.'rft Nuud
" unwr. Hay..
!;-K t-h'Ural..
I'nllerer
I'lillet-r X.V
J Jlll'ili SlrcISA
J'lll.m U l.ili.i;
;w. ' .irrli-n.
!;'*!- c.'jM.t.
} 1*1 Kurin
1-1,1. *:.i.
• •Id. GlI.iRMi .
[ id. Trim* ..
J'lliv Grllrlut
L'B'x-iiruui-:...
Volur
IT
+ 5
+ 2
.V,
4 3
+ 3
+3%
-10
- 2
119%
IM
62
U
27
S3
77
19%
172
1211
Tti
23
15
16
58 4
w
OS
X
6 A
43%
90
40
166
135
196
J7%
8
38%
4a 1 ,
■w
12 V
sm.
76
S’
i.tn
a
155
461?
St
SO
19%
33
A luynudr Hat.
Aunh—.-ird i; n
} niiKtnin- &r
A 1 1 n*u. ■] 1 Urn
A" turn u|ve ..
'ranter
Hrlmnl E.P.*t
Br. Print Corp
Hrlrtaiu Pre«i
Hnltihia
SHSP^fc:
+ 1
IclMpmn^Vpaii
+%
BrlHlnl .it.'.ro
Brtiu-r Bsc.-L.
Brlt.' ur A.ict
Bm. I<-v la ud.
Broro. .Uhnuy
1 B. ..... .
1 -idMiH
chrjd.u.r ! r.
+ 5
•Vi
4 V'-
25
60
68
36
J 6 %
10
125
71%
40
'IiryvIrCk'A
jarlim Deiri
■le.ir Ll.fterj
•irii'-n-ron...
■•"'Ilri Hd.
' "«l". T
' ran. Fnii- ..
jja* I - '...ilfr,.,-
J’emii-' Br-u...
1 6. >r. i-l.i HMiR
Ivtiiii i!ri' ..
llillmiFVliv*
K.lt.F
Klhilu ItBruck
ri'ilMim
Font
|i ton. Untnni..
null re nr
Hanger Inr.,.
HiTiii'i ind. ..
Ilnrrlid.i, T.i ’.
Harm rli f.*ri..
Hunter HliM .
Hrore-fl if'imlii
lli-iili-i-
H'dll'iilrk Ant
B*-iiiiIiuj<
Ja-\ Scrrtrp..
JeUiro 1 Jin....
Lit w, .li^L-ph
Maun ft I'lvurn
JJanii ft.' rum
-Marlin. M-....
P.flk *1 r Mien,
1 'UMdn-d ....
I'ridift 1 I., rk u
Hiilrk. II .»...
I . "in -r....
s.-.|.|..u l'|,. lN .f
ski|.|M-n.r..„n
l.lld- ..I l.ucl*
ru-eii.-uilt
rrii.i- v indjofc j
riiirni-r Mann
1 Uuillui" Sir..
Jf uclud Tr|r«.
MimILiii'I. ...
M lii--iiril
''"•■'Hu id. .». |
J"ri, 1 rul-r . |
A- 11 III 1 » rii .r
1 Pi
P.-Lan.-aPaper
From ft Ree,l.
Ivallowny. . 1 ...
'•eereGnws...
GomJ'ju ft'jirh
□ l'iiiki 'ount X
WT*-
-%
+2
Mci.'uniuodale 207
.Meurii-''. . 1 .. ..
Vrai lull
New- lull. XV
Hurirvon IrlKIC.
Peruruin
T'ynimMnrp..
Uiitl .V SmitlL
Kf.-il inil
Smith. " H*A*
j.' Ora.
nilMifm ■ V*..
^r.'"*. Paper..
ri'i.Ni>mii'iir
J nir-r-ei! I’rt.
’’ "*■-• Groun..
Mad'liraiui'B 1
Melirtera Pub
M 1 U 011 Brui..
+ 4
PROPERTY
**!■■ l-JIJfelir.J Pr»'p. {*3
7? - I *? '“■' j-raylim 4&
•-> 1 AHn. 1 tl. 1 iii-ir.il 129
19.- Vuial. I nv x P 2*A
+ I
-X
+ l
w*rau 1 in.... 235
Benimraniu. a 12
Kulrlu Tin....
.Klj-TlHdf
B-dewoiiv ....
Mnte-vii
pp>kn 11(11 stb
Bii.I'.Ih
Burma Min. *.
''barter i.-.iyg. ___
WJW.'! 1 ..'? iil" ij
H.Ullbill Grttri n IF. J. -
-• -5
• :■!«
•n
137
370
4c
152
225
9%
■*n*.i
•lit
+ 4
46
la7
6 J!%
48
1 **H
58
68
127
K9
199
34
54
5P
37
117
83
M
- S
+ 2
4611
TTI
171
*10
*
272
■tin
69
IHt
■’ll.
1-40
■on
l<n
■VM
431
154
276
366
■*5
3U
267
295
177
INSURANCE
61% lAi-i il. ...
5*. ■JrLiatii I'ron.
u' "■J»'-*l-
Ju , l*inln;rti
a
F J' BnVionFXu"
'.ai'iMl.v i.nl*
iUa li.rurnl-v Jtq
d u 'irntrorlteSaL
*% I' liarinfi
ia
i.unbdil tiatri..
1 Miro-Eis.'o
ft Bwr
LVunil'iiitein.
I 'urban Hern.
L. Ifty fuBL’Iu
■iw: lirie
» Gu'lulii..
^tKnud'.ona
Bst Land Prp«
Elaliuri:
JiKp-jr.-uiisi ....
J-reUiliem
r S. i.kiliild..
'."fluid Prop*.
<y..rr
'■p*. Mluiii 1 .-..
' jWl* ft P hnt
'.aupvirt
Great BKilrter
Grooivlei
H bui n I on Ar's
Hamptun Pje.
unrnioay
Hartelyreat....
pooitkduc. .. ..
I'lria
■•"hnaJe*
K.*.niuotitu:. ..
KlHlns«»ri|....
Kiw..r
Leslie
I.ltinoiQ
L>iodon T 1 n.!I
Pflnrho
Mmtfnr..
Lyduniifir pi?.
MnlarauTInD
Jro*>in.*u
lle.tali E* *
Middle 'A
w, t
256
426
214
16c
+
T S
4- 3
+ 3
36
177
10 %
20 %
76
61
90
48
584
17o
220
980
88
160
91
l'%
122
+ 7
-%
- 1
+ 1
-9
\’..rl ■
' : if:
" 4
+ 9
73
203
+ a
+ %
+ 7
+ 4
- 1
-a
-3
37
£16%
4 a
83
25B
34
184
126%
B0
34
95
140
256
F/fdor 360
5fM' jita ia!
Ne;v its. .. .
lv;tt r ! 7 ' HIU
U\ ?h luiliciuil..
-
‘Prh.we
J e».n'. :d :«£nrj
Peiajlii: s7
4^10% M%
Fr*J*. n no 111 ... -
P r-rr,
f7jiuii|r. oa ?tii;i
■ 1 -* n r
*~ n llrdin;
»■*,
P-,
71
74
41
600
M
41C
67
+ 1
+ a
■t T.-rr’i,
h "Till,
(iifcrirtj
m Me
+ a
+ a
f«e&
+ 2
JK'ft jljanu Pro;"
J-. S li.lO'l'* mi'.'nn
+ 3
174
+ 2
+ 12
+ 2
- 1
HD
JWi
«
4W
.Vil
•6H i
IHH ?
Wl
772%
MS
2L3
TIM,
R l %
111 %
INT
«r%
US'-
17
.*" 6 *
ii
no
10
jo.i
375
122 %
29
15
53
4H
47a
Ihr
+91
U6
Vh%
3> j
IIS *
Tbli
’14 ,
■wn-
ia ‘
174
191%
t'JS
123%
1 «|*
3i%
146%
10
265
LS7%
225 ;
50 j
M2'.-
115
■VQ
770
1 J 0
JS
l.-V
J ■■"•I <\ ii.li"
Mi reiirt | tr.
Ml"- 1 Hon-.;
"ri'ui
H-.rl
i'l-.i nit
I f, id-iu ■ t-
l*r»rto|. |,|
"Id- III l-il ....
J.-l'l.-i- \ ....
* If ...
■•■-hi .-11 ip Her..
31%
J7% t-
I*- “ it" I, 1 Tn’l. J Jo
"*J- -reriiin 5 io
.*9
"" * 'll 'll. e. 4r.H
" I .III , . |,,J
I tul ■ in. i,. 1 , m ijn
I, 1 , 1 1'" ■"•.. 315
1 - 5
+%
1' 'ril-'-UI ... .
■.a:rv* VeirT
I* r.-.uiclelt
I J fti-lraii
Mkirrlnci.m | n
I f.'l?-r lnv
IK. rat.- Pm p ..
I'rouiil ■liinrn.
I'-rl. Purtliuid.
r-i n. I.*
I* ■••■■11 i- il Prw
• -r.-eu-|(' .v b
'■•■■--■n'li'ii •%“>-.
1 ■■ .in <| s,
• ••iriiti" i'iih.
I I f'»n.riiL-rsiin a \
.< I 1 -r
1 1 »■ Prup 1 h 7 .
1 1 1. 1,1 1
j?-. r£;5& X'f
*! 1 1 -Hi*! Ild-.-Py
si ""|s.sn;..
j 1 1 1 i-'/rf.... ;
f? •• * ~l ui Ia r.
11 . Pun-Sp
• { -v W
J
sji -p Prp
I ';*••■*• II 11 Ids,
!*■■* lint.kpp.
intry Ei. I
■j m. K1.11.. ... 1
; Mi iiilifi-it.lv Ki
..>■ w L«iUil"ii.. 1
l:;, ,r, MTW. 1
|' '■I'l.-l.'ll-i- 2
r 1.1 r« .11 l.ind.
{ ■ ■"■lii-i
+ 3
-'•r
—20
+ 5
332
79
3 06
_ BSD +5
■ Ml .''/rye r<74 4 . £
LttVi' u^. .. a -, 0 - 6
■ s i 6 -
^■Icctl-'u Tat.
• >’:ntn,..f
■'*-'.7'’ : ' D fni"
Tradlu. Kin*.
** .''.il trail....
s mil -,,1 ....
; .ai i«i-nn...,
■*:"u .1 i%m...
■I'/lr- r: Irtr...
r.'ii-'in'i"*...
T.« 1 i.>"di:
1. ri.n -h Tin. ..
l.C IIIVP4E...
fnoii C'TI'..,
^Platinum.
J®5T-f=
r.'-IUn u
'J|* , *‘' rra »P | at 145
tt UlL" l-|i ,,
f-ne..,. 90S
9
710
78
76
82
83
168
J'flATE
^ lnr th
PIT
w r,, ppt
’ ,r !rtv %
i > , i
+ 5
4H
15
2-*3
29
54
IL7
lr.5
138
«a
■■‘■8
21
U,,,0} inti
a * ( - :a
rT/ip
’41
-3
n UH
fhp
atn
a
+ 2
+ 3
. %l\
idinv
- 2
+ 1
+ 1
rtj: i ,
+ 1
-t
+ 6
f. 1 %
. 876
"•-•’•'ern.Iuuin 26 0
MmiiclUaab .. 133
f * 1 L'-iusi.. as
K4t iii,Li .Vnrio 243
'ffltndram. ... • so
+ 3
+ 5
- 1
+ 3
+ 5
^■s?,
Ulj
; «-ui|. -
+:%
Vj
12.1
.14
93
156
6 %
67
126
am
r-ti ■
am.. I
,r M
7*5
•ai
LTD
Iflfl
I hr
153
r*4
ra
K!
■HiZ'.-.
m
+ 1
+ 11 *
— 3
tic
iw
id
UB
HI
149
80
Hll
*22
IliHi +l] B
S'i
235
US
911,
HV.
W
l «1
160
shipping
v 1
' '“irl Uu. .
1 *'|ii 1 r>| s s
Fill", t.rthi,;
' II..-.I ", "
liurlil.-, |
in f.ri, ,,
Iilil-i 1 I*iiij ||,
.n.*"|e. I I. ..
leiUiIimX
' Il s .
... . ■"■ |l, *' 1 '•■ni.
r 1 r "":-l!i»*.l*
J | T 'V H. lftli, v
' « es-ririite
Q'loLaHon temp. Rneponii-d
all
T 6
-2
'■'d .tn :
I* A
- 2
+ 10
AH
10(1
3il%
TOBACCOS
40
+ 3
64
US
139
■IJi
ft*.’.-,
ns
an
60
7n%
Iftl.
124
106
- i
+ 2
24% ..
M
I.H
l«
Ml
Z45
IJi
*11 He
Hi i'nli.liis i, ;
' "rri r*- *h*..
i .irr .li p 1 .
'■milillf * \* .
■- <IIhI|.., . ..
Iiiil", .
I* 1 'nli f Ilf
T 1 **" -• » I'lr
'•■I f Jr.|.
' ■•Ii.riv* I lit | '
Uld. lfb. clii.
-u
f.'a.MU. .. .. I0 + ,
^* •■an'imr 385% +n,
j* u, "ivl I'roid. 219
|S- Mi. | l*nip na
i>t.t'iilltl i*||f .. 29
•■‘■••"■-■ii l:-irt... r.i
•»*v«*r..i_u.'jc8 76
' 1 K 0
NiTllin Dn,, j jj
"■'i' , .. ,, nv*ii. srin
si'A-k Li 7,£ i 75
Muilty, JJ 171
iom.ii ft otj- . lM
Tuwn ft i-tiini ia?
“ 7 *. f . era Sen. 44
i r fl J.S'.'dHr. 120
i-^ti "?“• Hr. 189
Hjfn.i.nJ | nf j, 7
JJ rat iiii'u pnlp ; ll
■Sm-WlS 1 . ?;
" ruiDiir TniisC r ’
"iiiiunr inpsi„..__ ii
Dewiuk Tliiiim....;::; ,5’ 7 3
^^newlfnlJintWi.; IL ™ - *-. 1
BriL it lAuublun x n „ ~* 1
Burton Grp TT.. ' -
Lainden 9S5£S0nd..'.'“ S?.
Cpni.iuodnn."SeQir;,.;;
5L yo =
.1
h;
: . . ** n
58
41
B 8
-%
-3
+ 3
- 1
ltd
TV &
CINEMAS
ICO
179
- v ! l * r 'n,*u!.i a*..
*. : * ;J l, i".inl .v w 48
j I rM'-jiif* IA*??,
'LL. ter TV
46
i3*
*4
84
T 3
- 1
- a
tlarko iGw.l ”
ColpyuBofaBn....
LunWt •■■*■
Bvang of Lvurln! „i.
Kmtvjew EfiUtes « *
CtlviHlonniiir im'*' ,JS.
GtendcronlUpW 1 --- 102 %
Am, P Ul ‘™f«»tw*ir„ "** 1 JJ l!
“ l£zt Kotot '--’
IS
86
r-ie
-1
+%
+%
+ 5
T 1
+ a
.1
.v-.r p
"lil
,: Qi*i
>*10
f«° %9
j4i.HI i_T —
79
™ gjaiisr:::;::;;;;;- is
60 lROT«n«7.7r;!- * -2?
- juewAttiu.. ",
+ 4
'i. 6 - '-. ,p*
'V-4
I"
3 r.iiiiu**r 1 :si,ip lt ..„.;
76
7 ^ 5**111
— 4
P *M« 3T'
Vf‘- ’..A-
4 ?%
>« JJ Jure 1 j;
.*'1
3 IS.
i!|
+L • "*» iL
• i’j'-
"‘ia*
WW& J:
The . Daily Telegraph, Friday, July S3, 1971 . 17
COMPANY
HIGHLIGHTS
Wright-Scriven placing
ARRANGEMENTS are in Ii-ind for
the placing of 1.550,000 shnics of
WHphfrSonren- The company for-
merly quoted as Sn-rven-Cros-
thwaite. is now a subsidiary of
Bank Bridge Securities, which is
the vendor or the shares being
placed and mil retain about 60
p.c. of the share caoitn I. Brokers
to the placing: are Fielding New-
?P n .'.?? tl,:b € '°‘ in London and
SSStr "™ “ d Co - “
Mixed results from Howden
ALTHOUGH Howden Group staged
rfllreholrf 1 ° fitS r re t° very laat year,
^nrfilH der , s of lh « and gas
nandlm plant specialist have to
take a 9-pom t cut in dividend. For
“?5 «•»'■ JO April 50 the final is
reduced From 15 n.c. to 6 p.c
nrt i'" 3 ° f 16 P- C - At the
pre-tax level and ignoring excep-
tional items, ore-tax profits are
op from E+46.4ti8 to £950256.
rhe dividend has been reduced
to more accurately refiert earnings
m the company and takes into
arroiint Future tax requirements,
inr board intends to restore tbe
Payment in. liuc with the anLici-
puted future recovery in profits.
More again from Vaux
IT WAS .ANOTHER record drink-
ing year for Vaux and Associated
Breweries in the 12 months to
April 30. Sales rose 6-4 p.c- to
£26-6 million while pre-tax profits
Irothed up even more — bv
J7-2 p.c. from SLBW31I to
£2JoS.62o. Shareholders benefit
with an II p.c, final, which makes
the total 15 p.c. against 15'? p.c.
Cbairroan Mr F. D. Nicholson
says that apart from £310,00U. for
12 new public bouses, capita]
commitments in the current year
include £1-53 million for hotel.*
developmcnt. The company plans
to build a new hotel on Teessidc
and one in Edinburgh.
Brit. Vita raises bid
THE- POLYMER producLs group,
British Vita, yesterday increased
its offer for Miles Kedlcrn by
about £880.000. to more than £2-5
million. The revised terms, which
British Vita says take into account
the profit improvement at Miles
Redfem.- are either 10 British Vita
Ordinary shares for 28 Miles
Red fern units, or five British Vita
and £15-55 nominal or 7’j p.c
convertible. loan slack. 1935.
The «ew offer— at last ni gift's
price of 2S2p For British Vita—
values Miles RedFem shares at
lOOp each. The board of Miles
RedFern rejected the first bid.
which was worth about 65p a
share.
Metal Box marks time
DESPITE a 10 p.c increase in sales
for the June quarter Metal Bos
chairman Mr A. W. Page told
shareholders at yesterday’s meet-
ing that he expects little change
in the first-half profits compared
to last year's pre-tax figure oF
£3-B million on a turnover of £111
million. Domestic sales for the
first quarter rose 11 p.c to £40
million and overseas business in-
creased 9 p.c to just over £20
million.
Up warned that neither of the
increases refferted real growth, but
were the result of price increases
forced on the company through
continually rising costs. On a
happier note. Mr Page said the
group should benefit from the
Government's attempt to reflate
the economv and that entry into
the Common Market should be to
its advantage.
INVESTMENT & BUSINESS Banks hold trump
City Editor KEMETH FLEET daily telegraph city office -■ • TTTT "■ i J 1
1 12 Queen Victoria Strpct, London EC4P4BS Telephone 01-236 8925/9 cara in ±iJr oattie
Colour TV piltS •~~“'Ii-titt _i: BY the city editor
Thorn profits up
19pc to £37m
By RODNEY LORD
COLOUR TELEVISION is significant
proving just the sort oF gold co*t fioodi
mine to Thorn Electrical In- se,i -- and
dustries that a wide section of customers
City analysts and their in- |£ ase
vestment flock have been hCrdS
hoping. Sales during the year rental In
Lo March 51 have risen by 17 renmnerati
p.c. to £343 miJb'on and pro- rental is n
fits bclure tax arc 19 p.c. Deprecia
higher at £57-21 million jumped fr
against £31-17 million. £51-09 mi
Tn view of the results— and
the inflation thal has taken place e . mi . n
since the iasl dividend increase L'? n -
—the board is recommending a ~i million
rise in Ihc final dividend from as5 cts.
12! 3 p.c. tn 15 p.c.. making a Since /it
total of 24 p.c. For the year com- written off
pared with 2V Z p.c. incurred, a
Although colour television has
provided the bis boost to the £1
results the whole of ibr con- {, '!! iqr
sumer durables side has had a
spectacularly Mn.rcsstul year. ™
Sales and rental of TV sets, in- pr "V ,
eluding monochrome, arenunt Thorn si
For around two-thirds oF the dur- results to ^
ablcs business »■ hich in 136970 ''■'•rnings
amounted 'to p.c. of toial j? J. hc - w '
profit, so the performance oF ihc ~ ^1"“'
TV^sidc predominates in terms payable on
of quantity. UELIVE
Bur - refrigerators have aha Ji £ i on sets
done extremely well, increasing than 14 p
their market share to a quarirr TOO.OOn to ’i
of United kingdom production, one million
Tnoty cookers has sold well. too. Q f t fo e Cha
On the lighting side the group measures, i
managed -to recover the sort ot outimistic
margins it enjoyed before the ins in the
squeeze of 1969-70 and the divi- Figures
sion resumed its steady growth Rnrhh Rad
of around 10 p.c. a year. Over- raefurers’
seas sales grew well and the
potential within the Common fj_ et si ,
Market is particularly exciting wl ," rp up " t
for this side of the group.
General Engineering, which liveries of
earned 17 p.c of profits in the mer the sa
previous year., had a tough time 16 pea
in the prevailing economic stag- T„in»iKr
nation and did well to show some .. jj 1 ,
slight improvement worth *-l
. This year the acquisition of jh-nry term
'Eversned and Vignolcs (not con- fmm last
solidated in 1970-71) should p r c M 4
Further benefit the instruments n - er t 0 *■
division, but overall the Chan- rf ,*dic:al chai
ccllor’s inducements tn higher mcnts
capital investment are unlikely — * • .
to show through before 1972-73. cj ’SSI
Much more exciting for Thom meet the e:
are the purchase tax reductions business nc
and ending of hire-purchase res- sonal down
frictions. These are particularly the year.
significant in relation to high-
cost goods such as colour TV
seis. and if they shift some
customers from renLal to pur-
chase that will be no bad thing
because of the high depreciation
burdcu in the early years oF
rental. In any event the least
remunerative period of colour
rental is now over.
Depreciation in 1970-71
jumped from £24-25 million to
£51-09 million, of which TV
sets on rental accounted for
£23-6 million against £19 mil-
lion. leaving an increase of only
£1 million in non-rental fixed
assets.
Since installation charges are
written off in the year they are.
incurred, and Thorn depreciates
mainly in thr first three or Tour
years, with the heaviest charge
in the first year, the first year nF
boom — 1970-71 for Thorn — is
usually the leanest in terms of
profits.
Thorn shares rose 5p on the
results to 5H2p where the price/
earnings ratio is still a lofty 22-4
«md the yield 1-57 p.c.. covered
2-8 times. The final dividend is
payable on Sept. 10.
$) DELIVERIES of colour tele-
\ it ion sets could rise bv- more
than 74 p.r from an expected
7O0.onn to 800.000 this year and
one million nevt year a* a result
oF the ChanreHor's reflations rv
measures, according to the most
outimistic as'cssmerpis circulat-
ing in the trade yesterday.
Figures released by the
British Radio Equipment Manu-
facture rs’ Association showed
that deliveries oF colour sets in
the first siv months, at 278.000.
wr»rr» up bv 4R p.c. over the
first halF or latf »<ar. .De-
liveries of hlack-and-w-hite sets
mer the same period were down
bv 76 p.c. at 666,000.
Initially, the overall market
this year was expected to he
worth 2-7 million sets in de-
livery term?, almost unchanged
Frr.m last vear'? level. But
PREM A believes it could now-
rise to 2-5 million with the
radical change in rental arrange-
ments.
The industry, says the asso-
ciation. now has the. capacity to
meet the extra demand because,
business normally shows a sea-
sonal downturn at this time of
the year. I
Powell Duffryn lift
DESPITE a £1-46 million loss in
the Hv-Mac excavator subsidiary-,
Powell Duffryn torus in nearly
unchanged profits for the year to
March *1 and is stepping up iLs
March ol and is stepping up its
dividend from 12 p.c. to lo P-c.
with a 10 p-c. final. Pre-tax profits
come to E3.B-1o.000 agai n st
£5,573,000.
Q lies Lor — PIS
No George Kent final
NOT UNEXPECTEDLY, there’s no
tinrfl dividend for George Sent
shareholders today following net
looses of £501.000 compared with
Cause of the collapse is factory
closure and red undancy costs
amounting to £794.000, which re-
duces pre-tax profits to £285,000
Against £2-42 million. New manag-
ing director John Lutyens says:
** The actions taken are now bear-
ing fruit. Profitability is firmlv
established on an upward trend.
An interim dividend of 3 p.c. was
paid in March.
Quostor — PIS
Tate & Lyle shock
ESTIMATED profits of £11-1 mil-
lion for the year to next Septem-
ber are predicted by TaleOTd Lyle
compared with £9-16 million for
1988-70. The year's, total would
have topped £15 million but tor a
“major trading loss of =--uo
million incurred in Argentina.
Sharply improved results from
raw sugar production in Sou to
\frica and Zambia however, swing
depressed trading results into a
l-t p.c. gain before group expenses.
But Tate and Lyle has just agreed
that the Zambian Government
should bin’ a controlling share m
thr Zambian .Sugar Company.
Jrarirg Tate and Lyle hold in*.
P * C Quest or- — PIS
Cash & Carry £539m
WHOLESALE cash and carry
turnover in Britain rose -d _
from £420 million to £j-® million
— in the 12 months to May- Tl nis
is shown in a survey by the /v
Nielsen market research concern.
Wail St. weaker
NEW YORK stocks slid lower
vesterdav without anything in
the background to provoke sharp
s<dli n -- The Dow Jones indus-
tnil average feU 4-16 to 836-88.
Contributing fartors were a
ilnWdmvn in the pace oF durable
jneds nrdns. flihort mtereet rate*
liin-i lor the Fourth month,
-vd die unsettled dollar in
foreign exchange markets accora-
p73ed bY a sb * H * p rUfe in iK lh ?
gold. Volume was about
12 million sh ares.
AMERICAN COMMODITIES
y ''£$:&• rwp"i 5\ 0 ‘ "lay
fi^, 3 Vlf SO- 75 -to toO-4a..
“•cHlCJMSO: W»«at- B d rr_>_ slr^s.
V auxhaH cautious in
spite of £6m profit
By liOL.YND GRIBBEN
VAUXHALL. the General expensive F
Motors subsidiary in Britain, the effects o
yesterday reported a dramatic brought si
profits tururound in the first six Vauxhall as
months this year, but it made factuiers. .
pessimistic noises about the Overall. \
prospects for the rest of the year n p by aim os
despite the Chancellor’s reflation- t0 132,340.
ary measures. rose by 22
Net profits were £6.014,000 in overall rnai
the half-year to June 50, against p.c., and
a loss of £3 *3 million. Profits, vehicle sale
before interest charges of £2-3 p.c. Vauxbi
million against £2-2 million and showed a 2-1
a nil tax charge, wiere £8-o rations,
million compared with a loss of ^ j» lloa
almost £1-1 million. in the 5 e ai
Mr Alex D. Rhea, the new s t|- on 2 j n fj
chairman and managing director an( j j.f, e e p. e
installed by G M to sort out its holiday c | 0 s
troublesome British offshoot, t , s evidence
warned that the rate of improve- profit pros
ment was not expected to con- bright.
Cinuc into the second-half.
The first-half turnround re- , Li u ' , if
fleets the relatively long period /
of labour stability- on the produc- h B “ JJ
tion and components that t Luton w
has benefited the whole mdostrv . “J
with the notable exception, of spare cai
Pord. * n oommo
British Leyland improved its facturers it
first-half performance to end the stimulus
March with pre-tax profits up nmg its pi
from £1-1 million to £9-5 mil- bnt is cona
lion. Chrysler is back into thr. mgs on iin,
black after losses of £10 million may affect tt
last year while VauxhaD's per- On airrrr
formance compares with a £9-4 pects that
miTlion loss last year. produce ano
Price increases, in April, aver- tions this ' r
aging 7 ! -j p.c., have offset the makers hav
price of the costly two-year terms of a
wages deal influenced by the gross niarke!
expensive Ford settlement, while
the effects of the Ford strike has
brought short-term gains to
Yauxhall as well as other manu-
facturers. .
Overall, Vauxhali’s sales were
up by almost 25 p.c. from 146.440
to 182.S40. Domestic car sales
rose by 22 p.c. compared with
overall market growth of 5-4
p.c., and while commcrdaT
vehicle sales were dawn by 6-3
p.c. Vauxhalls Bedford range
showed a 24 p.c. jump in regist-
rations.
Mr Rlica cited the downturn
in the seasonal sales pattern,
strong inflationery pressures,
and the effects oE the three-week
holiday closures starting today
as evidence that the second-half
profit prospects are not so
bright.
Vauxhall is now taking a
cautious ' ipw of the expected
benefits oF reflation and so Far
has no plans for a second shift
at Luton, where jt has most of
its spare capacity.
In common with other manu-
facturers it anticipated some of
the stimulus measures in plan-
ning its production schedules
but is concerned that the ceil-
ings on finance house lending
may affect the build-up of orders.
On current projections ft ex-
pects that the measures will
produce another 35.00 0 registra-
tions this vear. although other
makers have been talking in
terms of a 50.000 rise and a
gross market oF £1-2 million.
Sir Jules Thorn, chairman
of Thorn Electrical Indus-
tries — recommending a
2‘ 2 pt rise in the final
dividend.
Trafalgar bid
in the post
MR NIGEL BROACHES, chaii^
mHn of Trafalgar House Invest-
ments. expressed surprise yes-
terday that thtsre should be. talk
in . the Cuuard camp of the
possibility of breaking-up the
shipping group, for which TH
has made a £26 milbon bid.
Recalling comments by Mr
Don Bid Forrester — whose re-
appointment to the Cunard
board has been seen as con-
firmation that the TH offer will
be rontested — about the high
break-up - value. ■ Mr Broackes
commented: “We have given
copious undertakings this is not
a break-up. If be wants to do-
.so. conceivably it is worth more.
Jt: is ruled out in our posture.
One wonders what their posture
is now.’’
The battle is being taken
direct to shareholders, with the
posting today of TH’s 200p-a-
slwre bid terms. No formal
replv from Cuuard chairman Sir
Basil Smallpeice is expected be-
fore the documents go out.
.Associates of Tralfalgar
yesterday bought another
700.000 Canard shares in the
stock market, and the group
now claims the direct and in-
direct 1 support of 35 p.c. of the
■capital for its proposals.
Watney keeps
buying Truman
DETAILS of Watney Mann’s
la tort Truman share-buying op-
erations were given yesterday
when it was announced the
croup bought 60,800 shares on
Wednesday. Watney's continued
market activities make yet
another bid for Truman likely.
Grand Metropolitan, whose
£44-5 million offer has .been
accepted by Truman, said - it
acquired another 144.745 Tru-
man shares at an average price
of 415-93p. 1
Grand Met's stake is now ,
approaching 10 p.c., to which can '
be added Whitbread's 10*7 p.c. 1 1
which is pledged to the same 1
cause. Watney's holding is over
25 p.c.
FAMILY
MONEY
^ GO';^
BOUND
FOR YEARS now companies
quarrying the mineral wealth
from underneath our country-
side have done little to right
the damage -done. Joe Irving
has been looking at a new
project in Surrey which could
reverse this trend.
Building Societies: an en-
quiring look at why mortgage
rates have not come down.
Tax: Brj’Pji Lincoln answers
some reader’s personal tax
problems.
Fixed Interest: Stuart Hav-
erstock explains the intricacies
of the commission charged tn
investors in the gilt-edged
market;
Insurance: James Wootten
discusses ways of combating
inflation and its effect on the
value of one's pension. This
the solution to 'last Saturday's
crossword.'
Car output may hit 2m this year
BETTER NEWS trom the Brit-
ish car industry: imports have
been checked For the first time
this vear. Rover has set sales
records, the total production oF
the industry may reach the
magic two million mark this
vear, and the latest Government
statistics show a big improve-
ment in car sales.
All this on Lop of VauxhalTs
announcement oF a swing from
losses to *n encouraging
vcir profit. The bocietv of
Motor Manufacturers and Trad-
ers stag'd tiiat new ca J s ,, re ,fJS
tered in Britain in tlw first hall
of the vear numbered bliLooi.
more than 50.000 up on Hie simi-
lar period of last year despite
the Ford strike.
British makes got almost 81
p.c of the market- Thi* was a
setback, because last year they
took nearly 87 p c. and sold
12.000 more cars. Ruf Inc good
news was that Ford is »nn?
ahead after the strike which let
in so many foreign rivals ana
fhP fallback is rapidK being
madr uo.
The June figures show that
imported edrs took 20-42 p.c. oF
the market, compared with
21-55 p.c in May. This i& con-
siderably higher than last veac
when imports had only 15-05
p.c. of the six-month, sales and
15-55 p.c of the June sales.
It remains to be seen if the
more stable labour conditions
in Lhe British car Factories will
continue to reduce the threat
from abroad.
British Levland sales are up
bv almost Sfi.H'in at 256.09S,
comparing the first bait of the
year viih Ibr .TanmrvJune half
of Jn70. . It save EL 41-55 p.c.
of the British market. Ford
safos were ncarlv halved by the
Strike, bein? 99.713 for six
monih< and taking 16*09 nx. of
the market. Chrysler <U K7 sold
69.263 for an M-IB P-c. share
and Vauxhall 7.046 for an 31 -6 j
p.c. share.
Figures for June alone showed
the Ford rccovrrv had dipped
British Lc' Iaad back to a 33-74
p.c. marker share. Chr> slrr to
10-00 p.c. and Vauxhall Jo 10 14
px. Ford stood at 13 -ul p-c.
.'forks! leader in June was tbs
Levland 1100-1 300 ‘ range, with
9-8 p.c of the market. Next
came the Ford Cortina at 9-1
p.c. Escort 6-7 p.c.; Mini 6-4
p.c, Vauxhall Viva 6 p.c..
Avenger 5 p.c., the Hunter group
at 4-6 p.c. and the Marina 5-5
p.c It was the 1 Marina's first
full month and sales were ham-
pered by some labour disputes.
Today the SMMT also pro-
duces production figures for
May. Austin -Morris output sets
a Fast pace at a weekly average
of 14,096 cars, with Ford at
8.620. Chrysler at 6.810 and
Vauxhall at 4.580. Chrysler's
figure indicates how much it is
pushing exports oF the Avenger.
New* car registrations in the
second quarter oF the year
averaged more than 105.000 a
month, the best For several
years.
Fnrd today discloses a £5^
million expansion plan which
could create 400 more jobs at
Southampton. It will permit
final assembly of Transit
medium - weight commercial
vehicles In be switched from
Langley, Bucks.
EMI plans
London
property
development
By STELLA SHAMOON
EMI is planning a multi-million
property development in Lon-
don's Tottenham Court Road.
The scheme comprises over
150,000 sq. ft. of offices, studios
residential accommodaton. shops,'
cinemas, public bouses and car
park facilities.
It has taken months to put
the massive jig-saw together —
the centrepiece being the two
private property . companies
acquired in February for £5-3
million.
The properties involved are. at.
14-19 Percy Street; 16-53' Totten-
ham - Court Road: 6 Stephen
Mews; 25-25 Rathbone Place,
Tudor House; Percy House; 31
Grcsse Street and Stephen Build-
ings. Gresse Buildings and
Henry Buildings (all in Gresse
Street); 1-15 Stephen Street and
an tbe properties in or fronting
Tudor Place and 19-22 Rathbone
Place and Vereker House.
Outline planning application
for the scheme — the work of
architects Sidney Kay, Eric
Friman and Partners — are being
lodged at the Lnndon boroughs
oF Camden and Westminster -on
Monday:
E M I already has an office
development permit. It plans
to occupy the whole office
clement in the scheme as its new
international headquarters, clos-
ing down and selling off- the 11
existing London - buildings it
occupies.
The main EMI building — at ,
Manchester Square — is held on
a long lease and is considered a
valuable disposable asset. EMI
has looked long and hard for
suitable office - accommodation,
at one- time considering Mr
Harry Hyams* Centre. Point
b'ui'ldiftg, still empty and a-
stone's throw from EMI's
present scheme.
But the Greater London Coun-
cil is unlikely to - object to the
office content of the scheme, be-
cause it falls on the boundary of
two boroughs where it is encour-
aging office building.
- It acknowledged that many ,
potential development areas 1
straddle borough boundaries.
The accident of borough bound-
aries will usually be found to
be the least important of the
.planning considerations involved
when considering these schemes,
it added.
BY THE CITY EDITOR
WAR HAS ALREADY broken Put' between
tbe clearing banks and the hire-purchase,
finance houses. It is a war which the banks
can win decisively if they have the resolu-
tion to do so. Demand for money to buy
cars, refrigerators and colour television
sets on the new easy terms is gradually
growing, and banks and hire-purchase
companies are in direct; competition . for
the business.
But the banks hold the trumD card — con-
fidential access to details 1 of borrowers'
bank accounts and the credit-worthiness
which they indicate^ Finance houses have
no such source.
Instances have already come to light
where finance houses have asked bank
managers for credit references and' re-
ceived a repfy on the lines: “ : The customer
is good for the amount and period you
have iu mind, but he is unlikely to accept
your terms.”
What this means is that the bank man-
ager. realising that his customer xs con- ,
sidering- borrowing from a finance house,
immediately steals the business by offering
him a personal bank loan at cheaper rates
of interest. Only the risky business which,
a bank manager would not want is passed
on to the finance house.
Relatively few bank managers get paid
by results. Williams and Glyn's, Number
Five m England, comes nearest, while
Natwest and perhaps Lloyds have ■ some
method of assessing a branch manager's
worth on the basis of profitability. Even
without much motive it should not take
long for branch managers to realise their
opportunities and take much of the best
business, from finance houses, even those
wholly-owned by the banks. *
Finance houses will then be left with
the riskier business, plus the half of - the
population which has no bank account and
no credit record.
Jobless rise will continue
THE JUMP in unemployment to 3-4 p.c
of the labour force this month is a
seasonally-adjusted figure and cannot be
explained by temporary considerations. It
represents an increase of nearly 200,000
unemployed, or almost 1 p.c of the labour
Force in the past year. If the Chancellor
had not made a Budget speech on Monday
it would now have been necessary to make
oiie. - -
\ Spare capacity in industry as a whole will
not be immediately reabsorbed- by the
latest reflationary ■ moves. Unemployment
\viU almost certainly go on up for some,
jnonths to come arid while this happens it
will be difficult for traae' uhTdnTeaders'to'
convince tlic rank and file to co-operate
and respond to the price initiative taken by
industrialists last week. -
But there is undoubtedly a considerable
amount of slack in the British economy.
Apart From the pool of unemployed.- most
businesses are working below capacity.
Many British companies have taken on
marginal orders just to keep their factories
occupied, but one or two big groups are
operating at 70 p.c of jriant capacity and
working some men only two days a week.
This gives considerable scope for raising
output and spreading overheads more'
widely- over a greater volume -of produc-
tion. Unit costs really can go down for a
while. This should help to ease fears; that
reflation will add- demand-pull inflation to
the existing cost-push inflation.
These fears still survive and not only in'
the corridors of the Treasury. * The rate of
growth is being expanded from no thin g to
4 p.c. -plus a year — adding an extra £1.700
million to the real- value of the economy in
a year.
In addition to the tax cuts and the en-
couragement to . buy on credit there is a
possibility' of a substantial .^iis-saving.
Savings have been running at 9 1 ? p.c of
total personal disposable income in spite ,
of the rate at which money is depredating. -
The only apparent reason has been tbe
degree of insecurity and the lack of
general confidence. Men in fear of losing
their jobs have refused to spend or take on
more commitments.
As soon as a new confidence spreads
through, .and perhaps before the unemploy-
ment figures start to turn down again, the
fear of being made redundant will have
disappeared and people will start drawing
. on. -tlieir. nest-eggs as well - as-spending any-
.increased earnings. ..or. ..credit ..they can
command.
The. economy has been allowed to run
down a long way. however. The question
now. is how quickly this pent-up. demand
comes through. It depends partly on the
resilience of the British consumer, partly
on the rapidity with which industry starts
to act on the investment opportunities
which new growth and the prospect of
joining the Common Market present, and
. partly on the speed at which industry takes
up. extra labour to cope with increased de-
mand.
The Americans have had great difficulty
"in getting their economy growing again this
year after a traumatic squeeze. But the
British economy is more accustomed to
stop-go. and should revive more quickly than
the American has done.
■ In the 'long ran the most important
question is whether companies will cope
with increased demand by re-hiring more
workers, of whether the labour shake-out
of the past year — -the first in 30 years —
will- -be permanent
It would be better for .the long-term
competitiveness of the 'British economy if
output recovers appreciably faster than,
employment
t ADDRESS
-
■ ■■ 1
i
-
DATE OF BIRTH
1 Are you at present under medical care,
having treatment, or-absent from work
owing Co Illness or injury?
2 Have you been off work for any treatment,
illness or injury for more than 6 consecutive
working days in the bat 2 yean?
3 Have you ever Had any heart trouble, or
angina, or any growth?
4 Has any proposal oiryour Hfc, ever been
declined, postponed, or a c cepted on •
special terms?
Usual Doctor’s name and address
NOYES If 'Ye*' give foil details with actual
(nckpoaaU names -of illnesses, dates and
' periods off work. Use separ a te
O □ sheet of paper if necessary.
' I declare that to the best of my knowledge and belief I am in good health tmA tbe information
given is true and complete. I consent to the Company seeking- information -fr o m any doctor
I who has at te nded me or from any insurance company to winch a proposal on my. life has been
nurln and I authorise the giving of such information.
SIGNATURE OF PROPOSER AND LITE TO BE ASSURED _
Cheque for First Month's Premium F&vmUa to ItavallnranuieeGranqsRlMHddaeiXMauMaTdrisVcMu J>TJ
Post to ROYAL INSURANCE (196*FUND) LIMITED, 1 North Jafm St.. LiwpMl LS32AS
This coupon can give you
a tax free investment
Provide fiacvoui^Ie lifeassurance
Entitle you to withdrawyour investment at
anytime after the first year without penalty
Theschemeis called Royal Lisurance
Cheltenham Bonds - jointly sponsored
by Cheltenham £l Gloucester
B uilding Society and Royal Insurance. '
It*s the savings package you need-
Under this plan, your savings count
as Life Assurance premiums. They are
therefore eligible for tax relief. Add
this to your interest build-up over a
period of 10 years and you will see it
can produce a most attractive tax-free
capital sum-'
From the very first savings -
you make, we give you fmrhwdiatift
and favourable Life Cover. If you
need cash before the end of your ten
year plan you can, after the first
year, withdraw without penalty*.
■ And if you’re looking for a mortgage,
your case will have special
consideration.’
This is how it works- Take the
example of a man of 29 who saves
£1 0 a month in Royal Insurance
Cheltenham Bonds. Tax relief- beings
the cost down to £8.45 but, after a
deduc ti on for life assurance, £9-50 is
invested each month fn thp
Cheltenham &_ Gloucester Building
Society where it immediately starts to
earn interest If building society
interest rates remain at their present
level, this would give a sum of £1,460
after 10 years - a tax free gain of £446
plus Life Cover of £1,800 throughout
the period.
* If you withdraw your money within the first year we
& month’s investment to cover administrative expenses.
|g ff, 0 Daily Telegraph , Friday, July *3. JS7J
BESBUS
Butterfield-Harvey
FIRST RESULTS from engineer
Sutterfield-Harvey, the merged
W. P. Butterfield and G. A. Harvey
(London) groups, should please
' shareholders. A final dividend
of 4^ p.c. i payable Aug. 27l brio®
the total for the year |o Aprii 2
to 7*2 P-c- which is 14 points
above the 6 p.c. forecast. ‘
Group pre-tax profit of £924, WO
(against E861.000 indicated at the
time Of the merperi is after- ebarg-
isn interest of CH.QQO to represent
the back-da tin? of the considera-
tion to the effective merger date.
Sales of £21-6 million were 30 P-C-
above the combined sales for the
previous year. ^
Holliday Group
WITH PROFITS up asaiVft.
is the dividend from Holliday
Group, the London-based electrical
engineer. This tup® the profit
■ rise is from £184.363. pretax to
' £220,047, and a. JSh .M. Snal on
Oct. 6 takes the dividend total
from 234 P-c- t0 30 p,c *
Ladies Pride .
TADIES PRrDE Outerwear re-
ports first-half profits up from
Effin to £174348 and says the
upward trend in profits should
continue. Output mall sections
is running at a high level and
uroduction for remainder of year
is fully sold. The interim is a
same-again 5 .p.c* Payable Sent.
16. The previous total was Z- f 2
p.c.
Mears Bros.
THOUGH its first half pre-tex
profits are lower with £90.000
against £120.000, Mears Brothers
Holdings, the building and dredg-
ing group, says its full-year
figures should at least equal last
time's £310-000. The interim is
held at 5 p.c, payable Aug 12.
[ Neepscnd Steel
' DESPITE DIFFICULT trading con-
ditions towards the en d uf tbe
■year to March 31 Nccpsend Ste^
and Tool is able to report a
104 p.c. advance in profits for toe
full year. Pre-tax the figure is
1969-70. and a nnai or » p.c
maintaios the total pay-out at
Board says the company is now
in a much better position to take
advantage of. the expected un-
p rove men t in the -economy follow-
ing the Government's reflationary
measures. - *
Scottish Agricultural
SGOTTISff Agricultural Indus-
tries, controlled by I C L is lifting
its interim dividend from 6 p.c.
to 7 p.c. on Aug. 18. Pre-tax profit
for the eight months to May ol
rose From £825.000 to £1 million,
ott sales up from £16-7 million ‘to
£17-8 million. -
Wcstforth Elec,
A FINAL dividend- oF 14 p.c. raises
I the total of Wcstforth Electrical
and Automation Iformerly Endura
Lamps) to 20 p.c. For the year
ended March Si. from l*Pj p.c. on
smaller capital last time. Pre-tax
profit dipped to. £596,590 from
£032351, but lower minorities and
tax leaves net profit up £70,764 to
£325,478.
IN BRIEF
' Bay Hall Trust: Net revenue for
half-year £303,000 t £222,000). In-
terim 2p (same), pay Oct. L Net
asset value 228p i226p).
Colonial Securities Trust?' Gross
income for half-year £112,700
(£113,900). Interim 12 p.c. (12),
pay Aug. 19. Net asset value 185p
UCT4 p>.
Derby Trust: Gross income for
half-year £125,869' (£97,2051. In-
terim 4-93 p.c. 14-86 p.c.), pay
Aug. 31. Asset valne per capital
share 1824p (l40' s pV.'
Bast Cumberland Silk Mills:
Profit £39.465 (£105.460) before tax
£&514 (£52.445). Final 4 P.C.
making 9 (16).
Glass Glover: Group first-half
profit £20.931 (£19.254) interim
15 p.c H5). pay Oct 1. Despite
rising costs final profits wDl sub-
.-stantially .exceed . those of last
year, which were affected by the
dock strike.
Governments Stock and Other
Securities investment:' Net pre-tax
revenue for Half year "-78,400
l£33&20Cj. Intenra 7 p.c. 17). pay
Aug. 17, Net' asset value Imp
( l32p).
Bttue Park: Group profit £46,147
(£93,698) before tax £10,774
(£41.062) and exceptional expenses
£10.146 mil). No' dividend (9 p.c.l.
Ley land Paint and Wallpaper:
First-balf profit £140,000 (£48.000)
on turnover £3*06 million (£2-54
million). Interim 3 p.c. (24), pay
Aug, 28. Sales for subsequent
quarter show improvement over
same period .last year.
Metropolitan Gas Meters: First-
half profit £79.000 (£79.500) on
sales £610,000 (E689.500). Board
docs not expect any significant
change in full year’s results.
New Equipment: First-half profit
£41,794 (£35.2261. Interim 5 p.c.
(5), pay Aug. 27.
Oceana. Laundry: Group profit
£10,534 (£10.761). Dividend 5 p.c.
(51, pay Oct. I.
Omnium Investment Trust:
First-half net pre-tax revenue
£502,000 (£345.0001. Interim 7 p.c.
(7). pav Aug. 17. Net asset value
I51p (1294p).
Rowland Gaunt: Profit £18.409
(£16,751) before' tax £6,622 (£7,203).
Final 9 p.c~ -pay OcL 5. making
12 ( 12 ).
Standard 'Trust: Net revenue for
half-vear £580.443 (£386,843). In-
terim 7 p.c. (7), pay Sept. 3. Net
asset value 144 J ;p t)23p).
William E_ Dunn : First-half
profit £45^60 (£45,290) before tax
£20.000 (£26.500). Interim 24 p.c.
(24), pay Aug. 2.
Interim Dividends: Ha ram ill
Brick 9 p.c. 17M, pay Aug. IB.
“ Investing in Success " equities
0-75p (same), pay Sept 50. Car-'
dinal Investment Trust, 2nd'
interim 711/12 p.c. (as forecast),
pav Sept 1.' Tanjong Tin Dredg-
ing 10 p.c. (124). pay Sept. JO.
TATE & LYLE LIMITED
INTERIM REPORT
Details of the Group trading profit (unaudited) for the six months ended 31st March,
1971 and of the Group profit at present estimated for the full year are shown below
in comparison with the 1970 results. Figures for the six months periods exclude the
raw sugar producing companies as the nature of their operations makes half-yearly
statements impracticable.
1971 1970
• r r“
Months j
31st (
Mar. i
2,022 1
1,454 I
250 i
Refining and Distribution:
United Kingdom
Canada ...
Africa
Molasses, Alcohol and Liquid Com-
- modity Trading, Storage and Dis-
tribution ... .
Shipping
Engineering and Miscellaneous: . -
United Kingdom ...
Overseas
Production of Raw Sugar (including local
refining):
British Honduras ...
Jamaica ... ... ... ... ...
South Africa
Zambia •••
Deduct Holding Company’s Expenses:
Finance • a*
Administration ••• •••
Research ...
••• ••• •••
Months!
to I
31st j
Mar. 1
801 ]
1,574
270 *
• (62)1
1 (211) j .
j 5.704 j -
14,000
1,540
. 1,100 .
250 2,890
Profit before Taxation ...
Charge for Taxation:
United Kingdom ...
Overseas
2,320
-- 2,730
Deduct Prior Years’ adjustments ... _ 80 4,970
Net Profit after providing for Taxation 6,140
Share of Minority Interests — • ... 1,510
Profit attributable to Tate & Lyle, Limited. 4,830
Preference Dividend 156
Profit attributable to Ordinary Stockholders " £4,674
Earnings per share 1(1- 8p
12,326
1.860
L085
218 3,163
" • - 9,163
4,749
.500 4,249
£4,134
The estimated profit before taxation for the year is £1,947,000 higher than 1970;
it would show a very much greater increase were 'it not for a major trading loss of
approximately £2,060,000 which has been incurred in Argentina. This was due amongst
other things to misjudg meats in trading, to devaluation; and' to restrictions placed
on exports by the Argentine Government which caused a loss on stocks of sunflower
seed already bought tor the export trade.
In view of the uncertainties of trading in Argentina, it has been decided to curtail
severely Future activities. This loss of £2,060,000 has been partly offset by a revalua-
tion of molasses stocks elsewhere in the Group which, produced a surplus of £554,000.
REFINING AND DISTRIBUTION
From April, 1971 UK Refining has had the advantage of the increased margin
following the successful conclusion of negotiations with the Government. However,
the specially favourable export opportunities which arose in the second half of 1970
are not expected to be repeated this year and there has been some drop in borne selds.
Profits in Canada continue at a satisfactory level; the reduction arises mainly
from the inclusion in 1970 of surpluses on redemption oF debentures-
MOLASSES, ALCOHOL AND LIQUID COMMODITY TRADING
Mention has been made of the loss in Argentina; elsewhere long term prospects
for world trading in molasses and other liquid commodities remain favourable although
in the current year there has been some pressure on margins, due mainly to declining
freight rates.
SHIPPING
The current year’s figures include certain surpluses arising from the sale of two
ships as part of the replacement programme.
Excluding these surpluses the trading profit for the year, because of the current
low level of freight rates, is expected to fall by about £500,000. This figure would be
greater but for the continuance of certain long term charters at high rates, from' which
Benefit will also be felt in. 1972,
ENGINEERING AND. MISCELLANEOUS
The improvement anticipated in UK Engineering has not yet been, realised but
contracts now in final stages of negotiation should ensure that recovery is achieved
next year.
Diversification into the UK meat trade has not come up to expectations and our
investments are being disposed of in the current year.
The improvement in overseas profits is mainly due to the recovery in the Daymond
group and the recent acquisition of Anvil Plastics in Canada.
PRODUCTION OF RAW SUGAR
Jamaican results have again. been very poor. Excluding the profit from the sale
of a UK lease, it is expected that there will only be a small improvement on the
maior 'loss of last year. Even a good crop cannot be profitable on existing prices.
If is vital to the Jamaican industry that a substantial increase in Commonwea.lh
Negotiated Price be agreed at the review due to be made this autumn; it must not
be thought that the industry can afford to await the higher prices expected on entry
t0 A 6 -oo E d C profit has been made this year in South Africa by Illovo but due to the
two vear crap cycle, this is not expected to be repeated m their financial year ending
Wl 1972 H?wrver, profitable sales, ofland not essenUal to production are being
made' which will assist in reducing their heavy borrowed position.
ThP 7?mhia Su-ar Company has had an excellent year. Agreement m principle
p The .“S2K Q S wi!h (he P 7?mbian Government for the purchase by them of a
has been reached wjgij e a an ^ reduction in Tate & Lyle's holding to
aC°42%Mhe S the Statement assume that control, will not pass before the
end of September. . ACQUISITIONS
A, recently annouaced. over. » of r S
SSSfsfcrtffwf of“he e cSm3i Act 1948; M46.T50 ordinary stock will be lss ued
in consideration for the total acquiafion. negotiations with the Government of
Following the succe^ul coittplefion oi tn . 6 , land, offer documents will
Jamaica for the sale of The in tb at company. A
^aro»lfTrL T ^ t a. < 'o?ra! , be ££» & >« the tnidority bolder, accept
lhe full' acceptances of these otters will bring the issued ordinary capital of the
C ™The V provisions of the Finance Act 196S do -not apply to the
Company. • ‘ _
CHAIRMEN
Amalgamated Power Engineer-
ing — Mr S. F. Batty: I expect our
overall results for the halt-year to
be. slightly improved compared
with a year ago.
Blyih, Greene, Jourdaln — Mr
H. J. Jourdaln: We have a well
diversified business and current
year should see a further advance
in group profits.
English Card Clothing— Mr S. J.
Walker: Moves towards the
elimination of American losses, an
anticipated improvement in French
profits, and a temoorariiy easier
position in raw materials supplies
ill India give some ground for
hope of a. continuing increase in
group profits.
Godfrey Davis— Mr C. RedEem:
Profits in first three months are
ahead of those in same period last
year despite the Ford . strike in
the first two months.
Sealed Motor Construction — Mr
F. Fensabene: Sales are running
ahead of forecast, but we are still
experiencing pressure on our
■margins.
‘ Valor— Mr M. Montague: First-
quarter results confirm that the
company bad achieved its bud-
geted figures and if present trends
continue it will be necessary to
increase the forecast of £600,000
profits this year.
Wheatsheal Distribution and
Trading— Mr S. H. Pamphrey : For
first lfi weeks of current year
cumulative 'sales are up 17 p.c
and, with costs more stable. We
should be earning satisfactory
profits.
BEDS AND DEA1S
Eldon R- Gorst
NORTH WALES builder and
estate developer, Eldon R_ Gorst
and Son. say that “discussions
are taking place which may lead
to an offer being made for the
share capital” of the company.
Shareholders should lake no
action until they are further
advised.
Fluidrive-Wellraan
FLUIDRJVE Engineering, maker
of couplings and transmissions,
haS been approached with a near
£3 mi) lion takeover bid from Weil- '
man Engineering, whose main
activity is designing and construct- 1
ing steelmaking plants. The news
followed active dealings in Fluid-
drive shares, which jumped 20p
to 240p in front of the announce-
ment.
Wellman’s bid. subject to recom-
mendation of the FJuidrive direc-
tors, is in shares and loon stock
worth around 260p, patting the
snares an a price /earnings ratio
of aboiit 12 1 -,. Wellman directors
consider the offer reasonable in
the light of Fluidrive’s uninspiring
profits record and look for full
support from the institutions,
holding more than 37 p.c. of the
company's shares.
Man. Hanover
MANUFACTURERS Hanover, the
London-based merchant bank
controlled by America's Manu-
facturers Hanover Trust Com-
pany. has sold 5 p.c of the out-
standing shares in the company
to the Long-Term Credit Bank of
Japan. This will broaden tbe
base for the merchant bank's
business with Japan and .Asia, a
company official said yesterday.
The long-term Credit Bank of
Japan is one of the leading banks
specialising in medium-term
finanane to Japanese industry.
Other shareholders in Manufac-
turers Hanover are N. M. Roths-
child and Sons and Kiunione
Adriatica di Sicurta of Milan.
Little sweetness
in Tate and
Lyle out-turn
CONTRACTS
Brentford Nylons
A £1 MILLION 15-level factory and
office complex for Brentford
Nylons has been completed in
West London by the Rush and
Tomkins Group.
Costain-Woodrow
A THREE-COMPANY consortium
to bid for dredging work in-
volved in building London’s
third airport at Foulness wiU in-
clude, subsidiaries of the Costain
Group and of Taylor Woodrow
Internationa]. The third partner
will be AngJo-Dutch Dredging.
InL Combustion
INTERNATIONAL Combustion
has won contracts worth £500.000
for heat exchangers and pressure
vessels . to be used in two
ammonia production plants being
built in Hungary and Rumania.
NEW ISSUES
Thanet Invest. Trust
UNDERWRITING has been com-
pleted lor the issue of GOO.UUU
Ordinary shares of 50p each at
(jfip a share aod oUOJiQO warrants
at 2<>p a share in lhanct Invest-
ment Trust, which is managed bv
merchant banker Leopold Joseph
and Son. The prospectus is being
published on Monday and lisLs
will open on Thursday.
Brokers to the issue are Joseph
Sebag and Co. and Norris Oakley
Richardson and Glover.
APPOINTMENTS
Associated Portland Cement
Majuuocuucr* — Mr Alan Patrick
appointed finance director.
Antony Gibbs and Sons — Mr G-
Fitlnn appointed financial comp-
troller.
Eucalyptus Pulp Mills — Mr
F. D. £. itergqTisL joined bnjrd.
Gerry ftes-Mr D. Fress ap-
pointed dideclni.
Imperial lobacco Group — Mr
G- A- idea appointed Lo board.
Lunt, Comiey and Fill — Mr
G. J. T. Richards appointed to
board.
W. D. Scott and Co.— Mr J. II.
Finch and Mr R. V- Hnlme
appointed general managers.
Williams & Glyn’s
aids exporter
WILLIAMS and Gbu's bank is
launching a new cash on ship-
ment plan for exporters. The
bank will provide lhe exporter
with cash at the time oF ship-
ment rather than waiting uniil all
the dncumcnlation is complete —
a process which can take several
weeks. ElTeciiveH (his is done
bt Williams and Ghn’s uself
undertaking responsibiiiiy for the
financial aspects of the sale.
. .“.We Feci that this new ser-
vice will assist the. cash fiow of
exporters of capital gmuls."
Wiliams and Givn'-- cjooit
finance manager, Me Alan
•Moore, said \C:lerdj>. “and it
will also simplif? lhe paperwork
aspects of exporting for them."
TATE AND LYLE’S interim
figures are always a feast for
analysts— the halF-h'me state-
ment presents detailed estimates
far the year to next September
—but these figures are hardly
a feast for shareholders.
In spite of a 21 p.c rise in
pre-tax profits. They are in Fact
a considerable disappointment,
always bearing in mind that this
highly" conservative group usu-
ally- errs on the cautious side.
Pre-tax profits estimated at
£11-1 million make good read-
ing against £9-16 million in
1970. But it would have been
over £13 million this year had
it not been for the £2-06 mil-
lion shock loss in Argentina,
where United Molasses' two-and-
a-half year old trading subsidi-
ary ran horribly into the red
as a result of “ misjudgments
in trading," devaluation and re-
strictions on sunflowerseed oil
exports.
- The last may not yet have
been seen .of this disaster — hut
what needs explaining is why
shareholders were not told ear-
lier in the year, seeing that the
first inklings of the situation
became apparent towards the
end oF 1970.
On top of that comes unin-
spiring news oF the home sugar
toade, where profits of £2 mil-
lion for the first six months
are expected to come out at
only £4-5 million for the year,
even after a full six months of
the new sugar price formula.
Here the story is one of
temporarily depressed home
sales, while exports lack last
year’s exceptionally favourable
conditions.
Shipping profits are also
below best ‘hapes — forecast at
£3-8 million against £3-3 mil-
lion — but this year's total in-
cludes £1 million profit on ship
sales. LongHterm charters
booked at the peak of the boom
provide a useful platform on
which, hopefully, the eight new
oil product carriers will be
able to build in 1972, besides
contributing a useful slice of
free depreciation.
The upshot is earnings of
10-8 d after minorities doubled
bv the improvement in Africa,
and .a price/earninas ratio of
13-4 at last night’s price of
146p — down lOp on the dav.
But at this level the price could
find support.
Adding back the Argentine
losses less the revaluation sur-
plus suggests earnings in the
area oF 16d and a notional rat-
ing of nine — without allowing
for any recovery in the British
sugar trade. This plus a 7 n.c.
yield on a verv solid blue chio
provides a fair enough basis
from which to regard tbe
future.
George Kent
clears decks
THE CURIOUS feature about
the appalling George Kent
results was the price action.
Down from 93p to a nominal
70-85p on tbe announcement,
the share closed firmly at 90p
at the close of play, with
cautious buyers in the offing.
The figures are just what one
would expert From new man-
agement reporting for the first
time on a sricken group. Hope-
fully the opportunity has been
taken to wipe the slate clean.
Trading profits at £1-08 mil-
lion look feeble against 1970's
£2-08 million, particularly after
interest charges only a shade
lower at £963-000. even after
taking in Thorn's £33 '55 million
Cadbury silent
on plans for
cake company
ANY rationalisation plans Fol-
lowing on the United Riscuits-
Cadburv Schweppes cake mer-
ger are being kept tightly in
wraps.
Announced In December and
now launched as McVitie and
Cadbury Cakes, (he new cake
operation will have a United
Biscuits chairman, a Cadbury-
Schwcppes managing director
and a £25 million a year turn-
over — about £2 million short of
market leader Lyons and well
ahead of third runner Mr
Kipling (Ranks Ho vis
McDougail).
U B's cake-making is done at
London and Liverpool, Cad-
bury’s at Blackpool. Worcester
and Liverpool. But Mr Hector
Lain?, the U B managing direc-
tor who is now also the cake
company chairman, refused
evpn to hint at any streamlining.
Heavy staff cutbacks already
pushed through make the topic
particularly touchy.
Not in the deal are overseas
operations, and as the mercer
derails were concluded yesicrday
U F» was announcing a join)-
venture plan for large-scale
manufacture of its biscuits in
Jaoan.
This will involve a 12-mnnt.h
tost marketing operation involv-
ing the retailing of hcavily-
tn\cd imported supplies at
close to local prices. Its partner
is Japan's largest confectionery
manufacturer, Mei.ja Scika
Kish a.
Cutting oul the big whole-
saling margins will help cover
Lhe 40 p.c. import tariff and
shipping costs, and lhe joint
cnmpanv tha) should Follow next
year will pick up the deficit re-
maining.
The Japanese biscuit market
(c worth £75 milPou a year.
Unito^ B":cu ! (s ri its in-
tor^st fir«=t in — bv sunn-
soring a Tnk-.n h oh'anl games
This year retailing .it uhout
2*-« time? the nricc of Uwd.l
(•.(notic*. its ■*nialJ sales are up
u\er 100 p.c.-
paul (dfld inite repcetled) for
Lvershed and Vignoles.
This mav not look too baa
after the hi si half profits or a
mere £351.000, oven )f the
second halt is still 31 p.c. down
on last year. The sting comes
in the shape of ''exceptional
items " which slash £794.000
from profits compared with a
credit of £353.000 a >ear ago.
So although th^re are pre-tax
profits of after tav
and minorities lhe shareholders
face a loss of £304.0UO against
last year's profit of fi'-lb mil
lion, and down goes the divi-
dend to 5 p.c. compared with
1 1 p.c.
For the most part the deficit
represents the cost nf factorv
closures, stock write-offs and
redundancy pavraeiiis. The
British work force is down by-
over l.UUU (II P-c.). The pay-on
appears to have been rapid, with
the first quarter of the current
year showing a firm "upward
trend " in profits.
Balance that against remain-
ing fears about management
and product innovation, add in
Rank's 13 p.c. holding and
Rothschild'^ caretaker role for
the IRC interest and you have
an almost unassossable situation.
Bui on a return to pre-tax
profits of £2 million-odd ]_he
highly notional rating of 13-5
leares liulp allure in the
absence of a bid.
Hv-Mac trims
PovreH Duffryn
THE ONE-TIME glamour side nf
Powell Duffryn. the Hv-Mac
excavator operation, due a larae
hole in the companv's growth in
the ye^r to March 31.
Hy-Mac turned in a trading
loss of £1-46 million, compared
with £523, 000 in 196-9-70. as a
result of complete re-organisa-
tion in a vear when there was a
severe recession in the construc-
tion equipment industry.
With luck and a slightly better
dimale in the industrv. Powell
Duffrvn should now be free of
losses on the Hy-Mac side, which
will allow the growth in the rest
of the group to show through.
The rest did well. Witb tbe
shipping, wharfing and transport
interests showing the way —
profits here were nearly 40 p.c.
up to £1-38 million — the group
ex-Hy-Mac pushed its pre-tax
balance up 26 p.c. to £5-3
million.
Results in shipping, fuel dis-
tribution. timber and quarries
were all ahead. Hamworthy
Engineering did well, though its
half-owned associate Ham-
worthy Hydraulics felt the con-
struction equipment squeeze.
This fulfills the half-time ex-
pectations and tbe market was
pleased enough to mark the
shares up l l ?p to 125p. At this
Ipvel the price/earnings ratio is
14-5 cum Hy-Mac losses. IF
these are stripped out. the rat-
ing drops to 10 which does not
look dear.
Add in lhe spice of sorap
cash to play with as a result
of the two property sales (over
£7 million was raised) w-hich
could do something to cut the
£1 million in-tcrest charge, and
the shares are not without
attractions.
Minet Holdings
MY SUMS on Minet Holdings in
yesterday’s issue were wrong: I
Failed to take into account the
recent one-for-three scrip issue;
and lhe market capitalisation
figure should have been £24-5
million, not £18-3 million.
New venture in
publicity for
management
CONFERENCE and management
course organisers are co-opera-
ling in a new publicity venlure.
In TIip Daily Telegraph next
Monday they advertise course*
collectively, though hitherto
each concern has done its own
publicity through direct mailings
to managing directors and train-
ing managers in largish com-
panies.
Mr R. W. Finch, of Personnel
Advertising, says the trouble
was senior men did nol have
time to think ihrnugh whether,
say. a man in Scotland would be
inlcrestcd in or could benefit
From a particular course. The
hope is that men down the line
having seen the advcrihrmcnl
wilt suggest they attend.
Me Finch also hope* that
training managers will find the
advertisements compact enough
to cut out and keep as reference.
Initially the ad\ ertisemt.nts will
appear every other Mmidav.
Other course organises arc
intere?rpd, but fur the moment
arc waiting to see hmv thr
pionper venture goes, if ihcv
deride to comp in Mr Finch
foresees advertisements appear-
ing every week.
The new method will rni out
the expensive and inrre.isinjiv
cnsllv mailing, reduce ud mi ni-
tration and cut the volume nl
paper descending on r.xrcuii\es’
desks
ine tools
in Moscow
THE BRITISH machine root
industry opened its new sales
campaign in Russia vesierdav
with an exhibition in Mtwfm
Mr Nicholas __ Ridlrv.
mentor Under Secretary nf bl-iti-
for Industrv, opened ii with a
forecast I hat morr stile* will he
wnn soon hcratise ol tin* l,Urc(
hw’-jear economic plan of the
USSR.
WITH SAFETY
BY UP TO 40%.
not more -than 4% after deduction
There are over.100 different growth b ° n **’ £3X2.*
equity and guaranteed, but very few offer all of these
advantages on an investment of £1,000 or more.
1 . Income tax free withdrawal of 6% a year with a . -
' reasonable prospect of real, capital appreciation.
2. Complete flexibility of investment between
property, equity and fixed interest ; the
proportions are constantly kept under review tor
you by an expert panel.
3. Special provisions for surtax payers.
4. The full value of your bond back at any time.
5. A guaranteed return on death higher than the
current value of your investment
6. A joint investment can be made by husband and
' wife ensuring continuity of a tax free income to
the survivor.
OR
earn up to a guaranteed 8% a year free of income
tax with absolute security and with the return of
your original investment after a given period of years.
AntonyGiibbs
(Life ^Mortgage Bmhers) Ltd.
4 Curzon Place, London, WIY 7AA
Telephone : 01 -493 1 51 5/1 671
Act now: To make the most of your capital return the
coupon to Jeremy Gibbs.
Name/s Age/a
Address
Telephone No; Max. Tax Rate
l am interested ini :
Income D j Guaranteed {~1 or Flexible Q «
Capital appreciation |_) J ' — }
Amount avaifable for investment £
I
GUARDIAN BUILDING SOCIETY
WILL ACCEPT INVESTMENTS SUBJECT TO THREE
MONTHS WITHDRAWAL NDTICE AT AN INTEREST RATE OF
1 0/ »^f!O.ai|0/
2/fl:sr.r ,u,, BO 30 /a
with Income tax paid by the Society
FOR AMOUNTS FROM £1,000 -£10 f OOO.
(Husband and Wife £20,000).
Centenary Year. Assets over £75 millions. Established 1871
MoitiMr ef tbe Buhfiiie Societies Association Authorised for Trustee fnvestmentt
Please write for free brochure and balance sheet to: Dept DT.
120 High Holborn, London, WC1V 6RH- Telephone: 01-242 0811
18 - 98 %
...enough to fill over 140 QE2&
Employers throughout the British Isles -24,000 of
them -have already discovered the impressive benefits
.Luncheon V ouchers brinj;.
Improved morale, increased staff efficiency,
reduced ab.ventecism. They've also noticed LV's are art
attractive inducement to prospective employees,
and aid in retaining those who they can’t afford to lose.
' LV s * a , r T * ,- v \ s fare for working crews everywhere*
Although LV's can’t be used on the QE2 they are
th^Rriri^ e i^ abIe a u°u er 19,000 rest aurants throughout
ne Dritibh Wes-which proves our service is well afloat!
Profit from reading our brochure
All Luncheon Voucher benefits— including
«i I ax Concession -are detailed, for your eves
only, m our latest brochure.
Ask your secretary to put it in front of H LV S
you -or. if you wish to be really discreet, ®I
you could post the coupon to us yourself.
mini mini mini inmi niiiii imin tnnn min) inini imm mi m mmi ^
-- 22 Gulden Square. London W1R4AD ==
H Telephone: ul-734 5711.0693- Telex; 262268 ~
^ Send my employer, Mr. . ==
= Luncheon Voucher Service brochureTpieasft, the =
— Company _. _. -f ^
B Addresa lOTfsaBod £
=■- _ ■ =
S * ‘ DT 2-1,7 \ =
p TVe extra you can afford lo offer ^
V;v ' 1 mm mini iiiiiii mini mini inmi imm imm imin iium imm imm i#
The Daily Telegraph* Friday, July 33, 137 / o
THE YORKSHIRE D YEW ARE
AND CHEMICAL COMPANY LIMITED
PRE-TAX PROFITS REACH RECORD £1 16m.
Sir Dontdd Kaberry on Group's continuing
expansion
The 71st Annual General Meeting oF The
‘ Yorkshire Dye ware and Chemical Company
Limited was held on 22nd July in Leeds, Sir
Donald Kaberry, Bt., T.D., ALP. (the
■ Chairman) presiding.
In moving the adoption oF the Directors’
inJZ 0 *? a u Annual Accounts for. tbe year to
31st March 19/ 1 , the Chairman, in the course
of tus address to Shareholders, said:
r Dividen ds and Reserves; the
before you shows the substantial pro-
gress made by the Group during the past
year Sales increased by 25% to £7-98 minion
sterling and pre-tax profits rose * 17 % to a
£1'1B million, comnared with
t/<jr.ono m the previous year. After deduc-
norI r JJf the net profit was almost double
at 1062,000. compared with £3-48.000 the pre-
vious year. It is proposed to raise the final
l*mdend to 20-5%. roaliina a total of 27%
Jor the year, compared with 23-5% in Lhe
Previous year. I am sure vou will all agree
that these results reflect great credit on ali
those in the Group whose combined efforts
led to this achievement. I want to pay
tribute, on your behalf, to their endeavours
during the past year.
f f Change of Company Name
. It is Intended to move a Special ResoTu-
l ' on 10 change the name oF tbe Company to
that of “ Yorkshire Chemicals Limited ”. The
■ reason behind this is to make the name
less cumbersome, more in keeping with
, . “ present day usage and yet indicative of the
■ current nature of the Group's business. May
I remind you that the present name was first
adopted ia 1900, when eleven West Riding of
Yorkshire companies then engaged in the
manufacture and snpply of dyes, tanning
extracts and chemicals, were amalgamated.
Many oF them had, in fact, been in exist-
""s, cnee m the West Riding, particularly in and
around Leeds and Huddersfield, from about
)£20_ Since that lime most oF the maaufac-
tures of the original Company have been.
. __ changed, and instead of being derived from
r-atural sources now come from synthetically
- produced chemicals. In more recent limes,
the Group has become especially known the
^ world over for its dyes for man-made fibres.
It is therefore felt that in concert with the
. rames used by the Group in its overseas
subsidiaries in Western Germanv, Spain,
Holland and France, and also shortly by
change of name in Australasia, -it would be
better to have a smaller and more concise
name and call ourselves For the future York-
shire Chemicals Limited whilst at the same
lime retaining the goodwill associated with
The Yorkshire Dyeware and Chemical Com-
r» vTT; pany Limited. Thus the name will be
^ J changed, but the quality oF its products and
' • the sendee it provides will continue to be
improved upon as they always have been
• - over the past years.
, Exports
f : ,“: During the year under review we have
been especially successful with our sales
* " overseas. Some 56% more than in the pre-
vious year has been exported. The Common
Market continues to take a sizeable propor-
tion of our exports in spite of its Common
External Tariff.
Textiles
I think it desirable for me to emphasise
one important aspect oF our major interest
in the textile industry. While we supply dyes
and auxiliaries Tor all fibres, it is in the field
of man-made fibres where our strength lies.
This is the field which in recent years has
developed, and which continues to develop,
more strongly than any other m the textile
industry. This is taking place throughout the
world and especially in the developing
markets where we as a Group are so active.
Looking ahead, estimates of world fibre
consumption indicate that usage of man-
made fibres in the 1970s will rise from the
current 4'* million tons to 32 million tons
P e r year, i.e. an increase oF over two and a
half times. The'sc fibres are largely the poly-
esters, the _ polyamides and the polyacrylics
which require the disperse and special basic
dyes in which the Group specialises. Thus we
are well placed to take advantage of the
large increase which is expected to take
place in Jhe use of these fibres. The Group
has specialised in disperse dyes since 1938
and bas berome an important supplier to
many man-made fibre dyers. The special
basic dyes, which we were the first United
Kingdom manufacturer to produce, and the
acid dyes used for nylon, which we make,
are also Irkely to be in increasing demand
in the current decade as the use of man-
made fibres continues to expand. The Group
intends to play its full part in that
expansion.
Future Finance
Members will shortly be receiving notices
convening an Extraordinary General Meeting
on J9rh August next. That Meeting will be
asked to amend the Articles of Association
of the Company relating to borrowing powers
and the rights of existing Preference Share-
holders. If these amendments are carried,
the way will be clear to raise further capital
for the financing oF our programme of ex-
pansion and. in fact, discussions are cur-
rently taking place with our financial
advisers, Kleinworl Benson Limited, with a
view to raising additional long-term capital
by means of a debenture issue.
Prospects
From that point 1 can turn to onr pros-
pects for the current year. As we have indi-
cated in the Directors' Report, the year has
started well and I have to tell you that in
the first quarter sales are well ahead of the
corresponding quarter last year. Much of our
manufacturing plant is working near to the
limit of its capacity. As I indicated earlier,
we are continually extending this capacity
to ensure that we can meet the bigger
demands oF the future. The Group expects
to have yet another successful year.
The report and accounts were adopted and
tbe Special Resolution, altering the Com-
pany’s name lo “ Yorkshire Chemicals
Limited ”, was approved.
INDUSTRIES Limited
IMPROVED EARNINGS -CONSIDERABLE PROSPECTS
Summary of the Chairman's Statement
Results and Dividend
1 am able to report a profit of £1.55m tor the
year ended 31st March, 1071 before charging
lean Interest and corporation tax.
The result is more satisfactory than seemed
probable at the time of the interim statement
More particularly so taking into consideration
the relatively poor results for the first six
months and that the Group was beset not only
by the continuing national problems ot In-
flation and strikes but also by fires at two
separate establishments.
In the light of this improvement and expecta-
tions for the future the Directors recommend a
final dividend of 8i?; making 13±?£ (1970: 20?%).
Group Activities — Home
Our gas appliance company, Robinson-
Willey, continues to hold a pre-eminent position
in the gas-fire market, and is expected to make
a satisfactory contribution to Group profits in
the current year. Berry Maglcoal has had a very
good year and the British Thermostat com-
panies are progressing well, not only in the
U.K. but also overseas. The required annual
surplus of £400,000 to service the loan stock
interest issued In April 1070 when the Thermo-
stat Group was acquired has been exceeded by
a comfortable margin.
Unsatisfactory results of the refurbished
Exeter foundry continued throughout the year
and only now can the first signs of recovery be
discerned. In order to cope with problems ot
over-capacttv we have decided to concentrate
both the Meters and Aircraft component
divisions in our Streatham Works.
Resu Its ata glance __ i. 971
Group sales to customers £24,909,000
Profits before Tax and
Inter est on Lo an Capi tal _£1 ,551^000
interest on Loan Capital
T«atiM -
Earnings per 25p ordinery^share 5-5p
Dividends per25p ordin ary share 3^4p
Net assets per 25 p ordinary share 57p
Our European interests werB considerably
expanded during the year by the purchase at an
attractive price from the Receiver of a German
Company, of Its wpll-known gas technical
division 'whose activities Include the
iaclure and Installation of hiah pressure gas
metering and control systems. The business
operates under the names PIntsch Bamag
Gastechnik GmbH and Petry Gasregeltechnlk
GmbH. Profits from the date of acquisition for
the six months to 31st March, 1971 oi £88,000
are included in the accounts.
Our exports have increased significantly and
now represent 9? p of total Group sales including
sales to overseas subsidiaries.
Future Outlook
The major problems and difficulties during
1970/71 are now almost entirely behind us and
those remaining are well under conirol. We can
look forward to the benefits which are emerging
in a positive manner from the co-ordination of
traditional skills and manufacturing facilities of
our original gas industry companies with those
engaged in the wider product and customer
fields of Berry Magicoal and British Thermo-
stat. The Group has been able, as a direct
result of co-ordination of facilities, to effect a
major reduclion of overhead expenditure.
Current Year'sTrading
It Is difficult in the present situation to forecast
results lor the current year. However, the
Directors are confident of the success of the
reorganisation plans and the fact that we now
recommend a higher dividend than the mini-
mum Intimated in the interim reflects our belief
that (subject to the usual caveat about un-
foreseen circumstances) we can iook forward
to a considerable improvement in the earnings
per share as the result of the current year's
operations.
Expression of Thanks
The year under review must surely be regarded
as one of the worst this country has known for
industrial unrest, inflation, and economic
uncertainties. Problems were created for the
Board and Management which demanded
swift and often unpalatable measures Lo
restore adverse trends to acceptable levels of
control and profitability.
Our thanks and deep appreciation go to all
who have played their part.
A JsL. Copies of the full
A&Sk jQSfk. JpA Report & Accounts £
A B &/T ft Chairman's Statement
w. ® B W may be obtained from :
W W £. Milner, Secretary,
W W W U.G.l. House,
* ’ ' 3-4 Bentinck Street,
GROUP London WlM 6DH.
Ocean Steam to
build £25m gas
tanker in France
Inv
By JOHN PETTY
THE OCEAN Steam Ship Com-
pany yesterday increased its
diversification programme and
pushed its current shipbuilding
contracts to £125 million by
ordering a 55,000-ton natural-gas
carrier at a cost oF £25 million.
It is tbe most, expensive ship
ever ordered by the Liverpool-
based group.
Ocean is about to make a
sharp change in tbe basis of Us
shipping business. It now con-
sists mainly oF the Blue Funnel,
Elder Dempster and Glen Line
cargo fleets. The 100 ships in-
clude the relatively new Seaway
car transporters on: the North
Sea.
Last year it made its first
move into giant tankers with
the 22fi.000-ton Titan. Now it has
a similarly-sized oil-ore carrier
on order in Japan, five bulk
'carriers under construction, an
oil-rig supply fleet in embryo,
and big developments ahead In
the container field.
It is a member oF Overseas
Containers, hut so far has not
operated any oF its ships. Now
lhat the Far East trade is being
switched to containers, however.
Ocean will man and operate four
of the five container ships on
order by Overseas on that route.
The gas carrier will be built
at the St Nazaire yard of
Cbantiers de I'Atlantique for
delivery in June 1977. It will be
for Odyssey Trading, an Ocean
Steam subsidiary based in Ber-
muda.
With it goes the probability
of a joint venture with Zodiac
Shipping, the Curacao-based
subsidiary of a large Nether-
lands shipping group. Zodiac has
a similar gas carrier booked at
St Nazaire, with delivery in
1076. Linked marketing of tbe
ships on long charter is under
consideration.
“Final value of the two ships
could be £60 million by tbe time
they are completed,” says an
Ocean spokesman. This would
make each of them more cosily
than the Cunard liner Queen
Elizabeth 2 and as costly as two
260,000-ton oil tankers.
Natural' gas would be turned
into liquid For transport in the !
ships at h temperature of minus !
162 deg C. Gas which “boils |
off’* during the voyage will be
burned as fuel for the ship's
boilers.
Lyon may bid for
J. Collett properties
MILLINER and wig-maker J.
Collett has discovered that
property millionaire Mr Ronald
Lyon, of Lvon group, is sitting
on 15 p.c. of its shares, acquired
recently from an institution.
i The big question now is whether
he will bid — not for hats but for
Collett's properties, including a
I freehold Factory in Charterhouse
Square far which a scheme of
redevelopment is being pre-
pared.
Collett’s joint managing direc-
tor. Mr Robert G. Thorne, yes-
terday thought it “ anybody’s
guess." Takeover talks with
“ more than one ’’ party earlier
this month have been termin-
ated. But among the interested
Beer sales up
at 13m barrels
THE Breweries Society said
yesterday that sales between
January and May, at 13.491,633
bulk barrels, were up by 6*17
p.c over the similar period of
last year. The figures for May
I were 4-57 p.c up on last year
I at 2.932,666 bulk barrel*!.
Bad weather may have
affected the June sales, but July
looks like setting a record .
because of the hot weather. 1
With prices up on last- year,
profits are also believed to be
running high.
parties was “someone who
turned out to be talking on
Lyon’s behalf," said Mr Thorne.
The Collett board controls
over 30 p.c. of the company, last
night valued at over £1-7 million
in the market as the share price
rose 3p Lo 60^.
Collett's freehold properties
were down in last year's balance
sheet at £98,673, while leasehold
sites were valued at £236,730.
However, the latest accounts
(For the year to March 31 and
out today) will show leasehold
properties at some £400.000 and
carry a directors’ up-to-date esti-
mate of the market value and
potential redevelopment value
of the freehold.
Swan Hunter
wins £l(hn order
A £10 MILLION contract to
bnild two 12,000-ton cellular
container ships for the Man-
chester-MohJtreal run was given
to Smith’s Dockyard of the
Swan Hunter shipbuilding
grouo yesterday by Manchester
Liners.
Colibri prices up
PRICE rises of up to 50p are to
be made by Colibn Lighters from
Sept. 1.
SEALED MOTOR CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY LIMITED
Satisfactory results with.
Turnover, Profit, Dividend and
Exports all increased
The following are highlights from the comments of the Chairman
and Managing Director. Mr. P. Pensabene, presented at the A.G.M.
held on July 22nd at which the Report and Accounts were adopted.
Tbe year under review has ishawn sound progress and very
satisfactory results. Turnover has increased from £3,632,762 to
£4,204,564 and profits before taxation by 26% to E762J70. ,
This has been accomplished in a year of uneasy trading con-
ditions as far as the United Kingdom is concerned. The Board
recommend a final dividend of 32£% making 45% for the year
(1970:40%).
# We have recently put on the market an 'S.M.C. Control Pack*,
which gives overall control for combined heating and hot water
systems to a far greater degree, than anything previously
achieved. This is receiving a good reception from the trade.
3jj€ Our Sales Companies abroad now operating are, SUUl.C. Varme
TBknik A.S. in Denmark, S.M.C. (Ranee) SA.R.L in ..France,
and we are forming a German Company, S.M.C. Pumpan — und
Warms Technik G.m.b.H. Exports increased by over 80% and
exceeded £500.000 for the first time, and the momentum we
have created will carry exports ahead at a rapid pace in the
cunentyear.
3j6 Agreement has just been completed with Lowara Pom pa of
Vicenza, Italy for the formation of a joint Company to manu-
facture some of our products in Italy. This is a most important
step in our international arrangements and whether or not this
Country joins the E.E.C. your Company will have an early foot-
hold in the market.
The strengthening of our Research Department has continued
and we now have a first class team of Scientists. Engineers and
Technicians. They have not only played a large partin developing
our range of circulators, but perhaps of more importance, are
carrying out research in depth into developments and products
for the future.
I view the future with optimism and am confidant we shad con-
tinue aur progress, provided the present inflationary spiral
within this country can be checked so that we are not at a dis-
advantage vis a vis our European competitors.
MAP.O THE
Mofer Agents £ Engineers
Th» 62nd Annual General Meeting was held on 22nd July
ic-i Eastbcume. In the Chairman's Statement circulated
in ad-a^e it was stated that the turnover f£15 360 532) was
a record and that the profit before tax (£492. 8b7) had
ir.creasec bv 46''j.
in order to bring the capital structure of the Company
more into line with ths capital employed m the business it
r -.--csec to issue one Ordinary Share of 2 5 pf or each Ord-narv
S-a're hei-d and to consolidate every two 25p shares into one
STn share. , ... ,
At the meeting the Chairman stated that the profit for
the first three months of the current year was well above that
earned in the corresponding period In ? 9/0. _
The report was adopted and a total dividend of 2 o
(20 " I approved.
George Ewer Group
(Gray-Green Co a ekes and Retail Motor Trad 1 *)
Points from f he Statement of the Chairman. Mr. H. G. EWER
for the 1 ear ended 2nd Januar 1 971.
Profits at £1 94.891 increased by £52.954 over 1969. Dividend increased by
1%to8%.
Freehold properties revalued at D JJ99.056 giving surplas of £494,953 ovar
book values.
1971 and future is viewed optimistically. The Coach side is benefitting
from expanding foreign tourist market. Retail Motor Trade turnover is
considerably higher than comparable period last year.
Our budgeted profit for 1371 is Q3D.D3D before taxation, and at this stage
we are ahead of budget.
FuU Sffiezes! aadAssmets from:
SiSi~i r /'j Hi'i. Lc-rdon, H.7S.
Printed In 9 colours. Shows rail-
way. .oils elds, airports; seaports,
canals and rivers. Inset maps
show population, economics,
religion, distances, etc. Obtain-
able through booksellers, or send
28p Icbequc or P.O.) to:
Dept. ME. Dally Telegraph,
135, Fleet Street, London, E.C.*.
I CITY. OF CHESTER
TRUSTEE INVESTMENTS
BONDS I TEMPORARY LOANS
Ilf 7dM ?'
* • Min.
Apply Cry Trtasuw. 41 Nonhpe*
Street, Chester. Tel. 40144 Ext- 73
worldwide
; Backedby one of
Britain’s most respected
unit trust groups
I t makes very good sense to invest world-
wide in a well managed investment fund.
You can do so today through Tyndall
International Fund. It is managed by a
Tyndall company based in Bermuda, and
is able to call on the investment skill and
experience of Tyndall in Britain and also of
merchant bankers S. G. Warburg & Co.
This merchant bank has offices in London,
New York and Frankfurt plus a worldwide
network of contacts.
Tyndall in Britain were the pioneers of
unit trusts for the larger investor and today
are responsible for funds worth more than
£ioo million on behalf of 40,000 investors.
Tyndall International Fund is free to
invest wherever in the world offers the best
prospects. The present portfolio is spread
as follows: USA 33%, Japan 28%, Europe
I7%> UK 7%, Canada 6%, others 9%.
TYNDALL MANAGERS (BERMUDA) LTD.,
P.O. Box 1256, Hamilton, Bermuda.
TYNDALL MANAGERS (CYPRUS) LTD.,
P.O. Box 1627, 3$ Makarios III Avenue,
Nicosia, Cyprus.
TYNDALL SAi
3 Rue Ami-LulUn, 1207 Geneva, Switzerland.
The mfmmiim initial investment is
£2,500 and this can be paid in any currency
and can be repaid in tbe same currency. It is
open to anyone except for dozens and
residents of the USA and residents of the
British Isles.
There are two other Tyndall Funds
based in Bermuda:
Tyndall Overseas Fund investing in
North America, Europe, Japan and other
non-sterling areas. Expressed in US dollars.
Tyndall Bermuda Fund- investing
in Australia, the United Kingdom and other
developed countries in die sterling area.
Expressed in sterling.
For details of all three Funds please
■ w rite to one of the offices listed below.
E. D. SASSOON BANKING
INTERNATIONAL LIMITED,
P.O. Box 1046, Nassau, Bahamas.
TYNDALL MANAGERS LUX,
18 Canynge Road, Bristol BS99 7UA,
England.
lyndall
International Fund
Is the day of the
amateur investor over?
Trying to follow market trends is
becoming more and more difficult for
the amateur investor. In Schroder
Capital and Income Funds which
are authorised unit trusts your
money is managed by professional
experts-Schrodex Wagg, the mer-
chant bankers. They devote con-
tinuous attention to the selection
of shares and portfolio spread.
Markets fluctuate and results can-
not be guaranteed, but Schroder
Wagg are well equipped to make the
most of any market situation.
The minimum subscription for
Schroder Funds is £2,500. This
carries an initial charge of only
— far less than most other trusts —
and this is waived altogether for in-
vestments of £20,000 upwards. The
difference between buying and sell-
ing prices is a mere 2£% compared
with 5% or- more for most trusts.
The annual charge is 1%.
Units are available on Stock
Exchange Settlement Days, usually
every other Tuesday. On 20th July
1971 the offer prices of income and
accumulation units in Schroder
Capital Fund were 108-6p and 113-Op
respectively and the estimated gross
yield was 2-04%. The offer prices of
income and accumulation units in
Schroder Income Fund were 117-2p
and 126-7p respectively and the es-
timated gross yield was 4*58%. The
next opportunity .to buy units will
be on 3rd August, 1971.
You can also invest in a Schroder
Equity Bond, a. single premium
poEcy, or a Schroder Equity
Savings Plan, a monthly premium
policy. Both policies can be linked
to either Fund.
AppUcmtinn tor Scbralac Capital uai Xncone Fond Unis or Ear Carte fcitonotion
Schroder Capital and hcome Funds
Managed tjy J. Henry Schroder Wagg &. Co. Limited, merchant bankers.
Trustee: Llcrydx Bank Limited. ,
.To Unit Trust Department, J. Henry Schroder Wagg & Co; Limited,
120 CheapsidesXbhdcra EG2V 6DS •
1/Wc declare that 1 am/we are 18 years of aac orover and rim*
I am/we are not resident outside the Scheduled Temtorie&aod.
that, I am/we are not acquiring these units as tbe nominee of
any persents) outside these territories.
Do NOT send any money until you receive a contract note
showing the exact amount due.
I wish to invest in units as shown below
at the price ruling on the next sub-
scription day.
Minimum initial subscription £L500.
Schroder Capital Fund
Sum to be invested
. Income Units £
Accumulation xr
links
Schroder Income Fund
Income Units £
Accumnlation* |"”jp "
Units t 6 :
Units | * : { For lull details eater name and address only on this
"nK income automatically reinvested, coupon and tick lhe relevant boxes below.
Please send me the brochure about:
n (Mr. Mrs.]
CAPITALS*
days when units can be
1 | Schroder Capital and Income Funds
PI Schroder Equity Bond
□ Schroder Equity Savings Plan
"20 The DaUg Telegraph, Friday, Itdg .33, Wl_
xtel
GROUP
Summary for Results for year ended 31st March^
£000'S
.. ... 7.628
Turnover
1870
£ 000 ’
6,825
Group profit, including interest, before taxation
Taxation ... ••• ”■
1,105
450
1,043
442
Group profit after taxation
Dividends
675
390
601
355
Unappropriated profit for the year —
Taxation provisions no longer required ...
285
263
246
51
£546 £297
The following points are from the statement by the chairman,'
Mr. Glanviil Benn: —
In a difficult year, with rising costs affecting all activities and
minimal growth in the national economy, the group made good
progress, the results showing a healthy improvement over the
previous: year. ’
The continuing rise in costs bore heavily on all Extel's News
Services and further subscription increases will be inevitable. It is
pleasant' to be able. to report a further strengthening of the com :
pany’s relationships with the. racing industry at all levels. Tele-
printers of. the Financial News and associated services produced
more inform a tian than ever before and the. service was extended
for the first. time to Belfast and Dublin.
Extel Statistical Services successfully' launched a new Japanese
Company Service, Extel Communications turned the corner as a
result of increased demands for its ..computerised securities services
and the Engineering division continued to record useful growth.
By energetic selling efforts in the ILK. and Europe the Bumip,
Mathieson group of printing, companies were able to maintain both
a satisfactory level oF turnover and profit until the postal dispute
began. As the national -economic situation improves so Bnrraps
will be able' to take full advantage of new feelings of confidence.
Central News {City Advertising) had a successful year. Thames
Paper Supplies on the other band had troubles, but now has a firm
base from which to develop.
Extel's Centenary year will present a challenge in itself and,
given reasonable trading conditions and good government;, -the
challenge will .be met. with confidence. _ .
At the Annual General Meeting yesterday , the report end
accounts were adopted and the final dividend approved.
THE EXCHANGE TELEGRAPH COMPANY (HOLDINGS) LIMITED
E.E.
JEAVONS
& CO. LTD-
TIPTON, STAFFS
Civil Engineering Contractors and Manufacturers'
Points from Chairman’s Statement
Turnover increased but considerably higher costs could not be
fully offset by raising prices and improved productivity.
Pre-tax- profits- -were £241,401 (£285i25-3); -total -dividend
maintained at 16%.
In the Contracting Division the return on mainlaying work
available has again been unsatisfactory; other civil engineering
work has been more rewarding.
The Manufacturing Division has been reasonably busy but
increasing costs badly eroded margins.
Most sections have satisfactory order books and the new year
has got off to a flying. start. Indications are that .1971-72
should show an improvement.
INVEST IN
THURROCK U.D.C.
TRUSTEE SECURITIES
7i% 7i%
2 Yean 3 or 4 Yean
__ M iugflO
Apply Tr*«raror (DT). Council Offices.
Cray,, amx. Grass Thurrock 5122.
INVEST IN COUNTY BOROUGH OF
NEWPORT
MON.
7h%
Ilf,
Min. ^ip-n-£B9S. CI.doo a over.
Trustee Seoul lira. No upe <va, 3 to
7 yean. Details, (ran Haraagli
Tn«""!W Centre. New-
port. NPT
UMBT TRUST PRICES
ABACUS UNIT MANAGEMENT
1971 |
HbhlLowl Kama till
ST-0 I aa-S |Glant »*0
a a BV4 iGrontll
■i | 24-2 flnuume
ABBEY LIFE ASSURANCE CO
W-8 1 2i-& lAbher gquitr Bund* ,S"S
17.0 J06*0 (AlibcrPnipffrty B*ra'fa Ilf'S
57-5 | 50-0 jtkdect. Lariat. Buaili 54-5
Offer
*37
•at,
*M*J
M-0
117-0
n-5
ffl-4
a*o
91-0
59.5
3-1
86-6
39-8
33-3
ALLIED INVESTORS TRUST
i9-fl 1 First Tnwt 4T-9
40-1
21-0
46-2
21-J
21-2
M-9
38-8
British Indus. ........ £'4
lurovtMncowTnitt £•■}
AUI&1 Capital jg'fj
Hied Enultr 88-7
Jec&rio. b mmIua. .... 34-8
[fall Lnoumo.
[ctals „ 3I«0
50*4
50-9
*31-6
59-*
26-5
39-8
JJ-Z
ansbaqbbk unit mans. ,
47-0 1 40hO IXurth .Vmonau) 48-8 1
ASS'CB
45-6
m*2 1102-1 llmotlcpSwi — I
m-2
s-s
80-1
53-3
87-9
32-3
54. S
55-1
EE-9
W-l
47.2
48-7
50-0
38*3
81 >1
23-9
39*2
44-0
25-0
75-B
34-5
BARCLAYS UNICORN
i lOnluoru Capital
Unicorn EasOWt
fUnleom Ff nance
Unicorn General
Unicom Growth ACS.
Dnloorn manor
62-1
M-7
50- 2
8E-4
30-4
51- 8
Unicorn Pnnr 53*2
atoorn Femrerr— - 3§ - 5
9S-B
44-9
UniootnTruatiK...... 9G-B
nlcorn 600
BARING BROS.
148-4 [133-2 [51 ration Trust 142-0
153-S 1 134-2 |6tra.tton Trurt Acc. .. 148-4
’ Win. BRANDTS SONS ft CO.
j®*4 8B-3 |BrandU Capital Hft-2
UI-4 j 91-( Brandta Income 107-4
<6-3
ffl
52
87
54-5
3-1
86-9
'102-0
47-8
148-4
1K-B
109-2
111 «4
141-0
141-0
144-0
TRUST MANAGEMENT
09-0' Bridie Capital 1 j5-0
100-fl Brides Capital Awuifl. 135-0
0 Bridge Income 138-0 ]
141-0
141-0
144-0
j45-8
'33-0
a-s
ffl-2
30-4
t-35-9
94-7
84-3
94-5
*■4
BRITISH LIFE OFFICE
British I.lts ....
B. It- Balanced
BJj. Capital Aomin ..
B.L. Dividend
[B-L. Opp'tr Aocam...
43-9
31-8
30-1
30-4
88-7
45
33' .
51-9
32-2
30-4
141-7
JAM
, BROWN SHIPLEY ft CO.
1U-1 (Brown sill pier Fund- L>6-T
M09-J. lABCum U8-3
141-7
143-3
54-7
CARUOL UNIT FUND MGR5.
I 4o-8 I Unit Fond S3- 7 I
54-7
38-9
31-1
CAYAUER SECURITIES
25-4 [income 31-9 I
22-9 lAoaam 29-4 1
33-7
31-1
28-2
86-4
54-8
CHARTERHOUSE JAPHET
a-o un -
22-8
26-6
■ sipp-l 26-8
Capital Aocum :. 87-0 .
Income 55-0
89-2
88-4
34
land Banka
Property Anna Itr .. ..
Proper tr Unite.
ss-r
194-0
39-B
37-0
55-9
53- 0
123-5
;$4i
32-3
54- 1
Speonlator .......
WtSSni
reatni tarter
38-7
36-0
35-0
ZB4-0
39-9
35-9
CONFEDERATION LIFE INS. CO.
®«-J 1194-6 I Protect. Invest - [ 246-5
, ,CORNHZLL INSURANCE CO.
1JH l»-5 capital Fond - 1 156-5
91-0 I 43-0 KlS. Special — | *0.0
. , CROWN LIFE INSURANCE
DM | 96-0 [Crown Brit. Invert. .. - f m-5
54-5 1
BB-3
86-7
CBUBADER INSURANCE CO.
I fiS-7 (Growth Fund to-z
DISCRETIONARY -UNIT FUND
6S-1 jDhavth>nary Inoouie 73-0
I 53d)
70-5
ationary J
etlonuy Arcnm. 83-3 |
82-3
86-7
-r» .^M.^-UNCQJJV EQUITY ASS. 1
173-3 U8B-8 (Lincoln 'Jim ( 172-5
36- 4
U-9
Tl-4
89-9
37- 1
38- 0
47-7
TI-1
74-4
33-5
30-8
W-S
56-0
EBOR SECURITIES
IlMund.
'I'ipltal Aae nm. ......
Cbannal Iain..:
29-2
35-8
57-5
54-1
98-0
56-4
49-0
87-0
53-4 ICommodlty 37-4
30-Q {Endowment - K-l
Financial........
[Hlich Betnm
nSrermlGro'wti" ! “
35-5
45-0
65-8
70-2
31 -Y
51-8
-70-9
59-6
37-8
47-7
*69-6
■74-3
33-5
28-7
31-7
35-6
EDINBURGH SECURITIES
21-7 ICrtacant Fond.... J... 27-3
Crewent Income 30-1
26-9 ]Craccnt IntL 33-7
28-7
a.-?
35.5
- . . E.P. FUND MANAGERS
n-8 | 93-7 |EJ. Growth Pram..-- 29-7] 31-8
EQUITY AND LAW UNIT TRUST
G0-6 I 37-8 lEqultY ft Law 47-5 | 49-9
FAMILY FUND MANAGERS ‘
M-7 [ 49-2 (Family Fund 61-3 I 84-3
• FIRST NATIONAL EQUITIES LTD.
U3-0 1100-0 I First National Growth 116-5 1 193-0
FIRST PROVINCIAL*
EJ 1 li 1 ^ ^ [ 84 -e
40-8 | 30-3 iBeKrvn 3B-4 I 40-4
- ' PRAM LINGTON UNIT TRUST ;
48 -a | 38-4 iFnunUnjnon Tmat - 46-4 | 48-8
FRIENDS PROVIDENT MANS.
wiwnar*™ si 1 »
G. ft A. UNIT TRUST
27-1 1 21-8 |G. ft A. 2S-7I 27-1
G.T. UNIT MANAGERS
88-5 1 Si I9-E- pap'** Income- 55-8
45-fl |g.T. Capital Accmn .. 56-7
GOVETT (JOHN)
a-a 1
SB-3
a-2
150 "4 JIU-J |8torfihold«» 121-8
144-0 ,
ISM
144-0
[Accum. 134-6
GUARDIAN ASSURANCE
116-8 1106*0 | Property Banda 113-3 | U6-2
GUARDIAN HILL SAMUEL
UNIT MANAGEMENT
80-7 | SB-5 IGuardhlll 78-3 1 80-3
HA.UBRO ABBEY -SECURITIES- - -
79-9 I
39-1 I
R-« I Ham pro Abbey Trout 37-7 ,
29-6 iHatnbro Abby loaanto 36-9 |
113-9 100-0
101-4 190-0
107-3 100-9
107-7 190-0
RAMERO LIFE ASSURANCE
LHambro Equity 109-2
Bambro Property .. .. 96-3 1
H. Hamced UipStaJ .. 101-9
ELJlan. Capital Aconm 102-5 I
113-9
101-4
107-3
107-7
95-4
128-2
71-5
50-S
195-4
HAMBRO UNIT TST. MCRS.
. 72-0
110-6
63-2
46-0
15i-0
HambroFnnd 91-9
Hambro Cluumi 1 Iain 194-4
HombroKecoverySitfl 68-0
Securftln of Amerlm 43-8
Smaller Co'e Fund .... 188-5
95-4
128-2
71-5
•47-0
'195-4
HEARTS OF. OAK BENEFIT SOC-
26-9 | 26-6 lEearU or Oak ffi-i l 9G-B
HILL SAMUEL UNIT TST. MCRS.
13B-0
231-1
46-9
09-0
HO-4
173-5
41-9
50-1
BO-2
1102-8
188-7
57-3
52-5
1129-7
96-0
31-4
CT-9
57-9
British Trust 130-0
Capital Trust S09-8
Dollar Tram 41-3
Financial Trust 66-4
, Income Tr net 165-6
Inti. Trust 104-2
Security Trust........ 39-7
Eame 49-9
Midland 1 46-0
136-9
230-9
44-5
68-5
173-5
■109-7
41-6
50-1
50-j
55-4
39-5 I
56-2
41-6
HODGE LIFE
43-0 | Banda-
33-5 iTaieorer Fund
IMP. LIFE ASSURANCE
40-3 IGrowth Fund. 44-1 1
INTEL. FUNDS •:
79-2 | 62-0 lintel T5-6 J 79-2
48-0 I
48-0
INVESTMENT ANNUITY LIFE
1971 | „ |
Hlrb l L>.'w | Nflmr Bid I
eS-8 | 71-7 | Linn Ird. Ferf. Fond — |
91-9 I 72-8 lUon fad. Perl'. Aomin. —
53-1 1 51-0 Ju«4 PTOPCrtr Fund.. - |
IRISH LIFE ASSURANCE.
116-0 [113-2 [Property llmlnlee-... U3-1 1
JANUS SECURITIES
Offer
ffl-9
SB-1
U8-0
94-4
28-5
Z 3-1
21-6
I 19-3
' 20-1
24-8
17-6
i?Ki«th 22-6-1
Ltamoja 27-8 I
iKaw Material. ....... 27-2
Seln -
iDcttxeln vest. Treat 20-1
JASCOT SECURITIES LTD.
24-4
28-5
Z8-8
21-6
26*5
29-0
51-6
91-1
21-2
25-0
23-6
34-0
Capital Fund.... 25-5
Comm willy. 28-0
Inler.Growrth 3t-2
Seclor- Loadei*-.. — 10-1
26-5
294
51-2
H-I
33-8
55-1
89-4
59-5
29-4
43-4
35- ft
15-9
43-5
36- 8
59-7
50-6
41-8
J ESSEX. BRITANNIA GROUP
38-3
38-5
79-8
30- 7
34- 5
35- 4
87-9
11-6
3G-B
S8-1
53-1
34-5
31- 4
OmltaJ Growth ....... 51-7
gltjr London .......... 51-1
ft General .......
Income Unit
Isreetmfent Trust-...
New Issue
plant fc Genasral ......
erlr ft Ueoaral..
_ ,.rCommodiiy ....
Britannia General — • M _
! Cotaiwwli I J- Ploa ...... -57-3
Extra Income 29-0
Seleellre bund 59-2
81-3
57-3
27-6
40-7
31-9
14-9
40-7
34-2
33-8
54-4
86-6
39-6
29-4
41-4
53-6
15-9
43-5
35-5
39-7
ffl-5
41-6
67-4
BhB
KEY FUND MANAGERS
[ 50-4 1 Key Capital Fund ---. 63-4
50-0 |£ey.Iniwine Fond-.- 6v-7
68-T
65-8
LS. FUND MANAGERS LTD'. '
25-2 | 20-4 ITalfenmn Units. 23-7 I 25-2
LEGAL ft GENERAL TYNDALL FUND
58-4 | 48-4 [Distribution 50-4 1 SC-4
5Z-8 i 48-5 lAccozn 50-4 | S2-8
LIBERTY LIFE ASSURANCE-
27-2 | 25-0 |E*y Fond 25-9 | 2T-2
104-7 llOO-O iKey 100+ Bond 99-7 I 194-7
LLOYDS BANK UNIT TRUSTS
33-4
26-6
37-6
39-3
49-1
First Innome. 43-2
Ar»-iim. — d7-9
Second Inooraa 4S-E
_ TWni'lDcoine".”””!!
48-1 Uecnm
LONDON AND DOMINION TST.
198-1 050-4 I Fund or Funds (STGI - | J96-6
LONDON WALL GROUP
45-3
as-g
47-8
50-3
■ss-a
64-1
48-0
60- 7
61- 5
45-3
50-2
47-8
50-5
63- 3
64-
OLD BROAD ST. ASS’CE
mi 1 r
Hljrfi [Low I Name Bid ' Off a
103-1 [101-7 [Her Inr. Prup. Bon-la — 1Q5-1
PEARL MONTAGU TRST. MCRS-
34-9 1 23-3 [Pearl Monuru inn ji-l 1 M-s
46-2 | 26-4 j Pearl 3lma«u .Vse... K-4 I 56-2
PELICAN UNIT ADMLN.
53-8 [ 41-6 ll'bicu =1-2 !
53-2
PICCADILLY UNIT MANAGERS
B-2 I 24-7 I Extra Income ZT-d 1 29-5
PORTFOLIO FUND MCRS.
73-4 [ 57-9 [UrlUl 68-2 ' 7S-3
55-7 I 50-6 luroxUi with Lnrone_ 51-8 ; *n-5
PRACTICAL INVESTMENT
1H-7 |107.2 llncouie 123-4 I 329-7
151-0 1125-4 lAnsuni l<i-8 j 151-0
PROPERTY GROWTH ASS'CE
110-5 jlffi-4 |Ab. Xaf . Prop. Growth 109-5
129-0
110-5
129-0
Prop. Growth _
0 {Prop. Growth Bonds.. 126-5
PROVINCIAL LIFE ASS. CO.
54-1 1 49-6 IProIlflc 89-8 1 64-1
PRUDENTIAL UNIT TST MGR5.
M-0 I 72-5 (Prudential S9-5 [ 94-0
. RELIANCE MUTUAL iNSRNCE.
U6-B 1101-S 1 Pro pen f Bondo - 1 105-B
83-1
35-B
55-7
-61-0
41-0
40-4
35- 7
B-0
27-2
36- 0
25-Z
S-7
SAVE ft PROSPER CROUP
Atfcinlk) 77-«
Capital 55-7
Cro»s Channel 51-9
Financial Securities-- SB-5
General 38-7
Blftll Yield 58-2
Income. 53-S
Infuranca —
InrestnienlTrspit .... 25-5
_ . ..Japan Growth Fund.. 32-9
M -3 pM mi Bonds ZJ-6
49-9 (Trident -
67-J
29-0
48-5
48-1
29-9
29-7
27-4
48-5
SI -5
04-8
85-1
■55-3
55-7
61-0
41-0
40-4
55-7
52-0
2T-0
15-2
25-2
65-3
55-D
33-2
64-5
BM
57-2
29-0
29-9
81-2
39-2
40-7
25-5
44- 7
45- 5
28-9
24-1
Capital Prior. 51-7
pBsp. Prior
KbunKhl Prior..
Ftaan. prior Amunt..
Fficli income
London ft Wall
&I
M-8
*37.
39-B
38-9
31-5
59- 6
60- 9
55-1
. , 17-2
S-0 [Scat.. Hleli Income.... 28-2
36-7
MALLET ft VnSDDUtEURN
28-8 | 25-9 iOrorseae 26-9 I **.5
MAN. XNT. (AUSTRALIA)
76-0
S2-59
MAN. INTL. (BERMUDA)
69-0 [ 51-J | Anchor S5-0
48-5 42-5 Anchor B.- 45-C , ....
85-91 1*4-79 1 Wall St. Fund J-fiS.jg
MANX ESTXRNATIONAL
86-7 | 75.0 |Anchor Aunt. Trust .. 72-0 ;
*1-90 1*2-56 | Fund N«V. @2-46 |
■SB-0
N7-0
38-5 26-5
47-9 46-6
41-1 31-B
47-9 41-1
A art. Ufa. Trust......
Income ......... t.. ....
Manx Mutual.. 39-0
FUhAoat. Ext 30-7
24-9
45-1
MARINE ft
114-0
157-4 1105-2
M. A
219-9
55-8
88-9
91-0
7B-8
67-1
26-5
47-9
41- 1
42- 4
GEN. MUTU.AL LIFE
U5-4 [ 90-2 lEqnilfak 115-1 ( U5-4
MINSTER FUND MANAGERS
39- 6 | ffl-6 iMlnelerPnnJ 38-3 I *39-6
MORGAN GRENFELL FDS.
111-51 90-0 I Capital Ul-0
assolaa-s Ilno-Anendea LtLOD
M. ft G. GROUP
lUborlrand 216-6
Compound-Growth .. 55-0
Dfridenti 66-2
lAceum 87-5
jEndowment Aeeum.. 75-0
Bonus 64-0
Family Bonds 119761 .. BB-G
Yiunlly Brmdsfl377-86J 94-5
Fun-1 of 1 st. Trust - 54-7
Accom. 58-8
General 112-7
AccimM 137-0
Island 79-9
Accam 89-1
Japan and General.... 55-5
Magnum 155-3
Aocum la-1
BU-llend 90-5
A ceam 110-9
Mirror Bonds —
pN-A-A.C.l.P -
Acoum — -
Pension lot-1
Fen Pension..— B7-8
Property Fund 97-1
Recovery Fuad: ffl-4
Second 99-0
Aocum... 120-6
Special Trust 77-8
Acomn 81-9
Trustee 95-9
lAceum..—... 151-9
219-9
56- 0
69-0
91-2
78-6
67- 1
88 -8
94-5
57- 1
68- 2
119-3
144-8
81-8
94-3
59-3
159-1
167-2
93-9
115-5
34-0
34-9
61-6
107-8
90-4
m-9
74-2
US-2
125-7
89-2
86-5
93-0
I1B9-B
42-7
5B-7
66-5
40-1
a -3
71.7
71-7
46-6
48- 0
91-9
110-0
84-3
73-6
50-1'.'
128-7
135-1
68-5
82-5
27-7
3-9
49- 8
80-1
88-4
100-0
5T-3
79-0
96-2
65-8
E9-0
76-1
58- 9
59- 1
■m-5
143-5
Bl-4
94-0
58-3
157-9
165-9
93-9
116-3
M-0
34-9
e-8
107-6
90-4
102-0
73-2
105-0
125-4
88-2
99-7
157 -J
ST-3 | 44-1 IClyde Uoncral Trust.. 54-9 | 57-1
60-6 | 59-7 iHfih Xnoome.... .. .... 43-5 | *50-2
G. (SCOTLAND) LTD.
59-5
SL-6
46-7
44-0
MUTUAL UNIT TRUST
30-0 iBlUfcthlp 57 -4 1 59-5
1 H-9 ^L»h YhSd 30-0 31-6
36-5 l Income 44-5 I 46-6
! 54-0 (Security Plus 41-8 | 45-9
...NATION LIFE INSURANCE CO.
U9-1I [112-3 [Nation Property loJ-3 / U9-2
109-0 UflO-D Capital Unito.... 96-9 109-0
44-0
257-6
40- 5
387-2
£0-1
50-9
222-6
54-0
50-9
87-4
845-2
149-0
50-5.
134-8
B3-0
64-8
50-7
42-8
99-5
41- 4
2W-!
Bb
55-6
L^O
40-8
40-0
55-3
204-6
117-5 ,
, 4i-8 *
52-6
42-4
37-8
80-6
29-8
NATIONAL GROUP
Oratory 42-0
Cotonierolal M4-6
Domeatlc.... J. JB-4
Graft Electric .V 574-8
□ulndneAPower.... 47-8
Hlcb Income 40-3
In restore General 912-2
.InrestoreEeoond^.... 51-2
IN.riJP-LTJS. 48-4
[Nntblfs— 64-2
National Com 999-0
National D 141-5
Natural Beaoarcca 47-9
Pro v_ Second 126-0
Sootcmlta..... SJ- 5
Security First 0-8
Shamroct 47-5
Shlrid.. 40-4
Unlr. Becond B5-8
lOO UocBri ties 40-0
43-2
*254-8
40-3
567-2
•50-1
50-9
221-6
S-2
50-9
67-4
■242-6
149-0
50-5
154-2
55-0
■64-6
-a
9B-8
41-2
NATIONAL PROVIDENT INV.
36-2 | 27-5 1X.PJL Growth Units 34-2 | 56-0
, N.E.L. TST. MANAGERS
■0 1 42-1 jRdrtar. ai-9 | .56-7
... NOBLE LOWNDES ANNUITIES
112-4 1 uii -9 IHUldemueJ Property lflb-8 | 112-4
NORWICH UNION INS. GROUP -
191-5 I 74-0 [Norwich - | 10Q-S
OCEANIC MANAGDI8
34-2
23-4
31-7
W-h
Bl-b
Oewral
27-8
4h-9
36-9
43-3
Zrl
20-0-
BS-7
iff-J
21-7
25-7
US-1
a-a
as-4
40*4
M-0
Ja-i
tvs
tt-0
•ii-S
0-0
18-9
Becovrrr
a- ?
33-8
29-3
45-9
SSI
97-3
SM-8
*0-5
»-9
0-0
108-6
113-0
5G-3
Z2-6
SCHRODER WAGG MANAGERS
£6-7
137-2
126-7
50-1
50-1
49-4
60-6
94-4
100-6
Capital 105-9
Aocum 110-5
Europe 31-0
Aocum 31-0
General £8-6
iftsuum...... 64-7
income...... .......... 114-5
Aeeum 123-6
ltB-6
live
3G-5
LONDON METAL MARKETS
on
Off,
dlltte
•<*h
HuJ all Wall 1 report
COPPER; ftcj.Jv . Wire Iwra:
y.tnu-at £447-30 i£443-50l
IlliJil.IJ c«ti E44 7 O0-£44 i-j(J. ■»
£4 jr-.50-£4S7-00. Aft. cll 5'. c - nn
-•445-frO-£44tj-00. ■> mtlis. 1455 DO
i4 5'j-OU 10: h 550 ,! UI P„
CuUiodp*: Oh. -.rriHinent »« »
154 jj 501. on. miU-luy faeh
445 j - j0. 5 mihs. £4 45 0p-£44 3-S0
Alt. cl-He ci«h £4’3 OO-£»35-00. ■
mriu,. i444 -00-£44j 00. T-O; 3-
mcl- ("ns-
TIN: P-n.m-j d-i-n. t im-lon co-lnr.
Off. icnlement il - 2R
un. niiddu; Cirh £1 4oa-u0-£ 1.434 *00.
A mtlh.. £1.4S’-on-4. 1.453 -On. Alt
rloM <i*ll £1.432- f>0- £1.4-54 -00.
mfh». £1,449- 0O-CI ■ 451 ■ 00- T O: 4u
met. In,..
LEAD: 5>eed\. Off. s-rUement
tlOS ■•'5 f£|09-50'- on. midda* cueft
£in9.oo-£!o9-15. 3 mth». £111- =3
£11 5-50. Aft. ce-h £108
£109-00. 3 i«th- . Clll-2a-£ll-50
T O: 3.373 m-». ton?.
ZINC: S:cad-.. Off. >ctthrntcnt
£135- 75- £134 501. Ofl. midday ce^l
£lo5- 50-1135 73. 3 raih». £158-23
£1.7-3-50- Art. ciwe ca«h £135-25
£155-50. 5 mtbs. £ 138 ■ 00-£1 18 ■ 25
T O: 5.530 me:, turn.
SILVER- Firm. Spot 64-7p-fi4-8p
5 niths. fi5-Sp-n3 9a. 7 onto*. 6 i-Sp
67-9p. S’nt 64-7 p-64-8o. 3
65 - 8p-65 ■ -Jp. 7 mtlts. 6"-6 p-6»-®P
T O: 47 J-is of 10.000 PC cacti.
LONDON SILVER MARKET: Spnt
64 - 4p t65-8di- 3 mriis. 65-7p i65-lp>
6 mHi*. 67 Ip >66-5pi. rr. .0-0p
169 -3pl.
PLATINUM: OfflclBl £50 r t£50i Pjr
irnv 07. Frrr-m.irkei £45'a-£49 l z 1*45'
£49' per iroy ox.
LONDON COMMODITY MARKETS
COCOA: S 1 r-uly. July _230- 0*231
51-2
166-5
46-2
37-8
46-3
42-8
SCO TBITS SECURITIES
39-1
136-fl
34- 4
a-o
35- 2
.32-6
iScutliil* 48-2
Sent Funds 15B-6
Seal Growth «4-3
'Scot Income 35-6
Scot Shares 43-8
Scot Yield 40-4
•51-0
166
45
37-
46-3
42-8
SCOTTISH WIDOWS FUND
306*8 1163-3 tin res (meat Policy 202-7 I 206-8
M-5
97-1
Z5-B
47-4
43-1
SLATER WALKER
IAsB*lfl Trust 32-8
Capital Aeeum 25-S
jFlnsJKlaJ Trust Units. 24-3
36-2 iGrowrli Trust 44-2
30-7 IfflSi InronK 41-2
354)
31-2
2S-0
Hid iDL-orue
SOUTHERN CROSS
34-5
27
25
46-7
43-1
43-5 |
48-8
38-3 [Pan Aust. Inc
434) lAccani
36-8 I
41-0
38-7
43-4
35-7
94- J
STANDARD BANK ICJ.)
95-7 | 76-2 | Capital Trust 92-0 |
STANDARD LIFE ASS'CE
94-3 I 7B-6 lEndowment — 1
STELLAR UNIT TRUST MGRS.
93-4 | 49-6 [Stellar Growth 56-4 I '59-4
SUN LIFE ASS. CO*
OF CANADA (U.K.)
US-4 I 91-B | Maple Leaf G.F
SUREN VEST GROUP
23-0 iFoture Income 33-7
36-2 Growth 44-9
12-6 Pttf Fund 16-6
43-1 (flaw Materials 46-2
TARGET UNIT TST. MGRS.
- [ 119-4
36-1
50-7 I
18-3
69-8
36-8
49-9
U-)
51-J
34-9
38-0
135-1
54-6
34-4
21-0
>7-4
. 18-5
J54-B
HV4-0
34-7
25-9
, 30-4
lUB-B
40-6
28-6
17-5
2S-6
, 15-0
'119-1
101-0
27-0
ier
Equity
Exempt
1 Financial
Growth
Income
Insert. Trust.
Prei
Pr-ifoasioml
3J 0
35-8
131-7
51-2
32-3
19-7
25-7
15-6
150-2
Prop- Monila Acc..... —
Thistle 33-0
34-9
37-9
136-1
64-3
34-4
20-9
27-1
16-5
■154-a
IM-O
34
TRADES UNION UNIT TST.
4S-3 | 36-2 IT.U.l'.T «-2 [ 4S-3
TRANSATLANTIC GEN. SEC.
82-0
98-8
67-4
6B-4
62-9
04-5
_«-.6
61-2
46-1
48-0
59-3
70-5
aa-4
K-8
49-5
49- 5
50- 0
50-0
35-4
Barhkan
Aeeum
BuukfaEfaam
Aoomn
Glen Fund
78-5
94-8
64-7
S-6
00-3
Aoomn 61-9
MarLJn Income 63-9
Araun
Vnmruard
36-8 lAccunr-
64-5
43-7
45-4
*82-0
94-8
*67-4
63- 4
62-9
64- 5
■66-6
67-2
46-1
43-0
38-B
TRUSTEE ft PROFESSIONAL FUND
21-E t 16-6 ITra-Prof. Capital .... 19-7 1 21-11
27-8 I 22-8 iTru-Prof. Income .... 25-9 I 27-6
T.S.B. UNIT TST. MANAGERS
37-4 | 27-2 |TJ5-B. Income 35-0 1 *>6.8
38-6 IT.8-B- Aeeum 37-0 | 38-8
TYNDALL FUNDS
Capital 112-4
Acuum.., UO-6
Ewnwt-. 96-0
Aeeum 105-4
.Income 81-4
Uocum 107-4
115-8
J34-6
99-0
908-0
84-4
UO-8
86-8
92-8
106-2
111-*
, 97-5
1112-5
84-0
91-3
70- 4
91-6
71- 5
75-7
100-8
100-8
Aocum 107-4
Local Authority M-2
Aocum 90-0
WvCTte::::::: :
115-8
134-6
«-0
108-6
M-0
U0-B
86-8
92-8
105-2
111-2
TYNDALL MGRS. (BERMUDA)
im-0 t es-0 Hull. Fund 97-0 1 101-
lor-o l so-e (Aocum iat-5 1 wr-
TYNDALL NATIONAL ft COMM.
Ul-0 | tn-6 | income Dlit m-e
W6-0 97-0 Acuum. 121-6
129-2 101-0 Capital DtaL l»-6
1M-8 llM-4 Iaocuw 130-0
U8-0
126-0
129-2
134-8
ULSTER HAMBRO TST. MGRS.
®-7 I 91-9 iGrowth 33-5 i
VAVASSEUR- GROUP
35-7
95-7
55-4
90-5
m-o
27-7
39-2
35-5
33-5
109-0
»-9
52-5
34*0
MO-7
L>7-5
19-8
26-7
70-4
94-0
M-7
25-0
29-1
23-7
89-8
ffl-1
23-1
34-5
80-7
102-0
Capltaj A-.-cum 25-9
Capital Exp 33-2
Commonwealth M-8
Enterprise Growth.... 122-8
En-»'nC- Mins 25-4
Finanrial 27-7
[Hltfh InevmtO 33-4
I rid Achievement .... 31-5
Investment Trust .... 104-3
lAlsun 35-4
Ulriiander 29-6
Oil ft Energy 29-8
Urtho-lov 97-2
iTrident Bom is 1H-0
25-7
35-3
89-9
126-0
27-3
29-2
35-5
,33-5
107-0
35-9
31- 5
32- 0
103-0
137-5
WELFARE INS.
100-0 I 89-9 [Invert- Trust Plan.... —
W6-0 llOO-O I Property Knnd —
9T-9
106-0
so-r
24*1
75-6
20-6
WESTMINSTER HAMBRO
38-6
2S-4
57-8
0-3
Capital
Flmnclal
Gn.iwiii invent. Unlle
Incurae
47-9
32-5
&
90-4
■34-0
■75-6
29-6
£S OnJ^avhuN Bonds 133-0688 unite)
'Ei-dLftitn*iilon
tBased on offer priew
Ceul. 2S5-'5-A36 0, Dec. _ 243 ■«
243-5. Mar-h 249-0-249^5. May
252 • 0-233- 0. luly 2.-i6-s-23r -0. Scpl
ISO 0-260-5. 1.699.
tot ONI IT Oil- nul't. July £12.1-00
£127-00: £f 23 ■ 00-£1 27 - 00: Nov
£•21- 00-127 • ( |0 - Jan £120 ■ 00- 1 26 • On
.\le*rh 1 19-00-1 1 25 ■ 00: May £1 Iff -00
£•24-00: July £lJ7-00-£123-00. Seles
nil.
COFFEE- SlraHi-r. July 346-fl-JM
prot. 368-0-368 1 5. N-pv. 354-0-3J4-5
.lau 0. March 544-3-345
Mi* 343- 5-310 -n. Iul> 340-5-^41
Saks: 401 lou cU five ton each.
JUTE: Qiu-f ■ P.U. '• C ” grade Jnlv
j 47 ; •• D " pr.nlc Jnly-Auo. la
per 'ono ion.
NIGERIAN GROUNDNUTS; Kernels
Julv-Aun. K2H >£IM1. Od: Aug --5
Sept £ T 88 i£IS3>. Cake 5ft P-c.: Ann-
OH. T43 i£4d *.
RAW COTTON- Quiet. July 30-60p
30-80 p: Oct. 30-40n: Dee. e>0-40u-
nn-80p: Ma-ch 30 - 4 0p-30 -80p: May
30 -40p-30 -30p T.O: nil.
RLrBBER : £r'»l 14 ■ S0 p-14 • 90p
14 .^50-15 -PllnV All?. 14- 70P-14 -gac
• 14 73p-l 4 9n-,:
I15-45P-15-6CIPI
SISAL: -July- UiH-J No.
C-ci 15 - 30 d- 3 3 ■ 50p
1 Basis £. .
3 (£78i: U.G. £73
• £791: No. 3 Luna
(£73).
SUGAR: London daily price £42-30
i £42-30i: \uo. E4-2-65-£42 70: Oct
£42 ■ 80- £4 2 ■ 90 1 Die. £42 90-£42-95.
Mrech 43 ■ BO-£43 ■ 35: Mas £45 ■ 85-
£45-90: Auc. £45 5S-£43-70: Oct
£45-43-£43 60- T.O: 115.300 tons
Surrhargc £>4 per ion. T^lc * Lyle ex
refinery price £4-16 i£4-16).
MJNFLCmERSEED OIL: Qnlrl. July
£160- 00-£170- 00 iwun: Sept. £159-00
£ I ' fi - OO: N»a. £150 00-£I68-00: Jen
£1 57-on-£I66-00; .March £152-00
£165 -00: May £147 - 00-CI63 -OO: July
£M7-0O-£262-00. Sale.; nil.
WOOL: Quiet. Julv unaudited. Oct.
80-0-8C-D. Dec. 8-3-0-e3-ff. March
Sl-O-84-8. SUy 84-0-35 3. July 35-0-
BA-O. Oct. 89-5-86-5. Dec. 86-0
S i • t>. Seles: nil.
LONDON GRAIN MARKETS
THE BALTIC — lvhrat; Canadian
Manitoba Nn. 2 July 20. Am. 10 frsns
ul-ol) Ea"- 1 Cnast: Nn. S unquoted.
U S Rm Winter Nu. 2 Aufl. Irons 28 -IS
Las: Coast; Hard Winter Nn. 3 IS'j
p.r. Alin. tr«n» 30-05 East Coast.
Au-intlMn r.n.a. O-'t. Iran* Trae out
_A-25 TIK,u-y. FrrtKft Aug. /Sept.
26-50 EaM rnsst aunted. Maize; No.
•2 >eHDw American Aug. 27-93 Tilbury.
Bariey: Canadian No. 2 Aug. 25-25
AvoTMiiootti leiry byra. ac. per long ton
unlr-w, slated.
MARK LANE: Quiet. Average nailers
uun-atlona for pre-mil delivery London
area. Wheat: Snft mllllm 28-50-39-50.
nn* crop A'if,—Senl . 21 00-24-50 value:
«emi-hard end feed unquoted Barley:
Malrirg nnouoted. leed new crop nrompt
24-00 value. Oats: Milling 38 -DO-
29 00. Ami. -Scot, new crop 23-00
value, teed 27 - 00-28 ■ 00
SVnTHFIELD MEAT
— M ln - “J?' 1 ,na ’‘.-. "br-lewfe sale* our lb.
D’rEE: ft-ot Tilled tides 18-3-2n-8:
JF r,r 2 34-2 75-0. fotrs 13-8-
4-3: Eire hotre 24-7.24-6. fot« 13-3-
14-2 Arcemine ch boneless mis — strip
l"*n« 35-0-30-2. rumos 30-0AS-3. top
std-t 27-5-30-0. sflversMns 25-8-28-3.
il-irks 35-3-27-3. nnmes 16-7-17-5.
- - — *35.
VEAL: E"i tats
he*>s l8-0--»n-0
bobbies 11-n.js.
&
30-0-33-0 __ ...
medium* IS -0-17-5.
O. *9-0. PORK; Eng under
lOOlbt 10 -0-14 -2. Ifh1-120|bs 10-0.
15-6. i7n-ifinw>« 1 1 -0-12-9. jon-
lambt in- 4-1 1-7. isnibs and over
10-n-lO-R; Eire. »ll vselnhts 11-7-11-7.
• Sneelal uuniatlnns — very Mph Quality
produce In Ilmlteif supply.
BILLINGSGATE FISH
stone — h'til 100-750. end Utn-
760. h-iddivs* 7O-20D. halibut .A.so-san.
he-Mnn* 80-130. Llapers 130-180.
turbot 20O-46O. whit-inn 70*100. Lb —
erabs 10-25 Inhster* 65-95. salmon 45-
70. rales 15-55.
COVENT GARDEN
, Ge.pes Ih Rein, muscat 60-90. Mart
30-40. nthera JO-2 n i»: neachua E—i.
lmD M?,T0-12n: strawherrtBi
•h e-°0; en*nhe-rfe« 11. AO; rherrles
7 1 --12 •-: Hl^cVrsieeanLs In.JH: red ru*.
ra-rts 7 <--15: nnoseherrles ennklen 4-5.
dessert 4-10: lidssb-rvbs 16-20: Imn
Plums 6- 10: anrfents 6-10; Enu. mnMnn
nnnles .S.R. Imn Inwl 6-8; red nr* 5_a;
Kenan nhis.n-r M *, 4n.?0. P.A. pine-
— -ides box 116-130: avnr-d n pe.-* s i—v
75-300: Pi.-nnnes cArf-H- I'A-IBO;
Tseirl rtnen rnrlnn* casrtn- 14II-S0O: «.A.
n-mn-p-n rnrfn- tsO.776- p a nrnnr-
Criilt rjrl.m -»25.'’7n: |eip--ns S A.
310-' , BO. 11*1. r-rinn CO«-7Anj
leltucT dor round -»n-3A. rr- SA-AO;
mr-imV—1 t—v rO-OO: l-.mnrnen 6-11;
■ishro.->n-s 17<— ?2<»- rrei-eft be.vns T S-
“’5. ararlet runne-s 7<,.10 h-n’rf
3 1 -- pen* ner 60-80- ■ -n)inn\sr-c drrr
60-30: enhbnne nri 70-RO- marrows -a
' r— .-—ires 4-7- rrl-rv box 75-
oo: rsnsirum n'lhern'-— in.
rMII,-s 12* 1-1 3: nlnhe ,dfd'«*-«c
Torn; on net 23lh oo-cq.
w-des pe, 40- AO- heetrimt net 40-50-
li-'han 70-90. portion* h'han
45-60.
MCHEY amp exchanges
Germany stops
sales: gold advances
J. &c
THE BUNDESBANK was not
selling dollars and the Deutsche-
mark fell back from its early
strong level to close 40 points
down on the day. Opening at
3-4610 to the dollar, the close
was 3-4650 after 3-4667h.
The guilder Followed the
mark, closing at 3 -SSST 1 * against
an opening 3-5510, while the
Swiss franc was steady at
4 '0865. The French and Belgian
central banks supported the
dollar at 5-5130 and 49-62' 2
respectively.
Sterling opened at $2-4187
without the technical advantage
and closed at $2'4188 after
$2.4192. Trading was light
Gold rose to a_ new two- ^
high, jumping 43 cents at-
morning faxing . to $41*59 g
and adding a further 11 cea .
the afternoon to $41*70.
Silver rose D*6f
liver rose D*6p to 64>4r .
oz. for spot ana 65’7p x •
months forward. ■ :
Overnight money in the K
bank market started at 5V6>**
and closed at §4 p^. £,
anthoritfes paid 5 7 gp^. for .-j
day funds and 6V7 p.t for - ’
years, with a mutual optioi •
break at a year. ^
The discount market was aj'^ 1 ’
short of funds and the
ties gave large help by putq>
ing Treasury bills from
houses and a few from the ba -
o'
n*
\c
ni
the pound abroad
Til loUowipg adHOTfl »tM I tor
The London market rata b ■«notea tor
Argentina.
10 60-10.70
60M-36
130.00—10
2.48—46*,
— .. 18.1 2^-133*
Frauce 15J3':-34
iTerin'ari W. 8.58-s8*s
Hulionl .... 8.50»*-59:»
ltalr 1.606 U -1.006%
OTHER MARKET RATES
TThng lmn f Hh.IHra.lft J30-M
Antratlna
Brlalum ..
Cona-la .
Dunraark
biur i-wwft
iBftao 864-865
Sami .... 17.17'i-IB , i
.'iirtuj'il .... 68. l?2- 02
dnafa 168.12—22
^wftlen .... 12.47*7-48
»witxprlaad. 9.88*0-88%
Utd -State*-. 2 4118-42
FORWARD RATES
Tbe forward raw* for cummclra fbr any
month and three months are M ronorwa:
1O.M-10.70
60 53—37
130.00—10
a.46»i*-4BUi6
13.533b— S ail
8 39-38*2
8.58ft— 60*4
06‘B— Lh07*»
17 iB-iai*
68 84-84
168-18—23
13.48-48**
9.88V— 89*4 ■
2 4 1 7 *— 42
-y* .
•m3-
□stria .... 10zr.pm-10Er.dfa 20 Bripm — Pu
' -- — "A-I7 0.PIB
..jfalnin .... 3ft . —
raox'fa 41— .21 o.pm
fSSmark .. t-1** Ore Ufa
France I ft— 1U c4*m
Cerm'uTtW) 1— % Pf*. pm
Holland .... 2V-21* c.nm ; »— “■» y-““*
Italy a*j— 1 U Lire pm 6— 3*i Lire pm
Norway .... 2*s-lft Ore pm SU-4ft Ore wa
gtreden .... Par— *s Oredfa Par— *zOrsdls
S wit xerlairt. 3L-1 *a e. pm 6*<i-6ftc.pm
ptd.Statw.. .14- J2 o pm ^2-.48 cjim
79-72 c-pni
1.34-L34 C.PE1
4ft -6ft Oradfa
4 ft -4 ft o-nm
3*i-2u P&.pm
8 ft— fi ft O.om
gold price ^
1st FbrDotfan 41.59 andFH DoHarai
CfaraDoDus 41.90 (DoQsa 4.
EURO DOLLARS
fiem dais 6i-M 0&* ai o fltli 5V”
Three months 6*e— 6ft Six monttB 6ft.
:’ui ,C
loan rates
Uiinr RATE:
6 p.o. 1st Aprff. 1973
FINANCE BOUSE BASS BATE;
Juno 7 p«.
LOAN: Day-to-day 4ft— «ft
Berm days 44— 8
BANE; BILLS:
Three months 64-64
Foot months 6ft— 6*»
Six sooths 6ft— Bftfi
TRA3XS BELLS: ^
Three snd Boor nrontbs 7-T** - ■ —
. Six months 7ft-7ft
LOCAL AUTHORITY LOAN^** -
Two days 5ft Seven day
One month 6
Three month
A A
INTERIM REPORT
Mears Bros. Holdings Ltd.
Civil Engineering-, Building and Dredging Contractors.
Trading Results:
The Group profit (unaudited) for the six months ended
31st Marco, 1971, and the comparative figures for the
six months ended 31st March, 1970, are as follows: —
Group profit before taxation
Taxation (estimated)
1971
£
90.000
36.000
1970
£
120,000
51,000
Group profit after taxation £54,000 £69,000
Notes:
The Group profit before taxation for the year ended
30th September, 1970 was £310.031.
Corporation tax has been calculated at 40% (1970: 42*%)
Chairman's Statement:
The results of Mears Construction Ltd. will be
disappointing. Only moderate progress could be made on
edurii " ' ' • ■ •
certain contracts during the winter and they have been - -
further affected by recently encountered difficulties,
including the very wet weather in June. However, the
company has continued to obtain a good volume of work
and now has a record, value of contracts in bund. ,
M. B. Dredging Company Ltd. is enjoying a successful yea r
and will report a material increase in profits.
Profits of A. Long & Co. Ltd. to date already exceed
those of 1970 and tbe prospects for the remainder of
the year are encouraging.
A. Long Products Ltd. have now contained their loss and
are in the ' ’ ”
— -he process of concluding an agreement with a
national distributor to undertake the marketing of
Protectowrap pipe wrapping products in the U.K.
1 have previously expressed the hope that 1971 would
see a return to the level of profit obtained in 1969,
but I regret that, for the reasons already stated above
in relation to the construction company, our chances of
achieving this target have been reduced. Nevertheless,
group profit before taxation in the current year should
at least equal that of 1970. Accordingl v, an interim
en ,i a v * he rate of 5? '» been declared payable
on the 12th August, 1971 to shareholders on the
register at the close of business on 23rd July, 197 L
W. G. Packman, Chairman.
21st July, 1971
/assistant
I PURCHASING
I MANAGER
8
• Our _ Fertilizer Division, 'based at Falixstowe,
Suffolk, manufactures arid markets agricul-
tural fertilizers. The Division has several
major plants and sales offices throughout the
U.K. and deals with many overseas suppliers.
K employs some 4.000 people.
We are looking for a senior purchasing execu-
tive capable of standing.'in Tor the Purchasing
” Manager when requ ired.
The successful candidate's likely to be in his
thirties, probably a Member of the Institute''
of Purchasing and Supply, and/or a graduate
and with some years experience in a senior
purchasing capacity or other allied techno-
commercial field.- He must have the-capacity -
to work under pressure and be willing to
travel both in* the U.K. and 1 abroad at short
notice.
The Company offers a salaiy com rpensu rate
with the post, a Company car and the. usual,
fringe benefits including a contributory pen-
sion scheme covering both retirement- and
dependants. Help will be given with removal -
expenses if applicable.
If you are interested in this vacancy please;
write giving brief personal details to:
Mr. H.T. Grant (SV5I, Administration Man-
ager (Person nei). Fisbns Limited - fertilizer 1
Division,' Harvest House, Felixstowe, Suffolk
1P11 7LP.
Agricultural
Investments
Australia
The London Aduisory Committee oT a well estab-
fiohrtl^ A I ■ T * f * .
lished Australian Company which was formed to
undertake and manage ' substantial ii
. — o- investments in
large agricultural properties in Australia wishes to
appoint an executive officer to act as Secretary to the
Committee and aupertrise the operation of the
scheme from the London end. In essence this
■invoices forming a syndicate of individuals or
companies to purchase ■ and own each property
. under the guarantee of first class management.
Applications arc invited from men aged 30/35 of
good presence, background and education who
have some knowledge of agriculture. They need not
have a specific professional (nullification, but must
have the business sense and command of detail to
oe able to interest investors of substance in this
type of enterprise. Some travel is likely as investment
w being sought in Europe and the U'SJL as well as
at home. ■
Salary by~ricgotiation. with possibly a shore option.
Please apply in the strictest confidence quoting
reference number 1265 to Clive & Stokes. ‘14.
Bolton Street, London, Wl Y 8JL. -
Glive&Stokes
Appoiatnmts & Personnel Consultants
CHARTERED SECRETARY
We have a vacancy Tor a qualified man'in thLriarge
international property and. construction group.
Based St our Croydon office; be will have the response
bili tv for providing a full secretarial service . to .1
number of subsiding companies agtj for carrying out
certain other duties o n a. group wide tresis..
Ideally, applicants^ have at
least 2 years' post qualification experience
Com petit I vo salary and fringe, benefits ^ara offered to
successful candidates;- 1 •
Pleace write for application farm h«-
PersnnneT omeer (Kef.: 5EC>1>. ihnitefi.
Trncnii ideal Cementation Gronp Services Lnnuea.
681, Mitcham Road. Croydon CR3 SAP.
SALES CAREER
The wines and spirite subsidiary of a majnr
national Brewery 'seeks a young man. aged 25 to
55, who wiJl be responsible for developing an
established fine wine trade. He will be working
from Reading and his area will cover the centre of
the. country from .Northampton to the South Coast.
The successful applicant should have had selling
experience in tift wine and spirit trade, particularly
with’ quality -hotels, restaurants and clubs, and
should bejambltioixs and dedicated.
In addition to a-* good salary, benefits include a
Company car, pension and bonus incentive schemes.
Compfefiensfve' training is available and there are
-good promotional prospects for the right man.
Applications, together with curriculum vitae,
should be made to S.C.18024, Daily Telegraph, E.C.4.
West Sussex
Education Committee
Crawley College
of Technology
Department of
Building
Lecturer,
Grade II
reawlrcd to teach
Building
Science,
Materials
& Structures
in O-N.C. courses from
1st September; 1971, or
as soon as possible there-
after- Candidates should
nold ’appropriate qualifica-
tions and those with
previous ejrperienee *n full-
time (or adequate pait-
timcl teaching will be
given Special consideration.
Salary Scale (under review):
— £1.947 v £.59 to £2,537
per annum.
Further particulars and
application farm attain-
able. on receipt of
lUmpcd-iMreuct fools*
Cap envelope, from the
Director of Education,
County HjJI, . Chichester,
Svtscx.
Applications are invited for the post of
Work Study Manager for a light
Engineering Company manufacturing in
quantity for the Motor Industry .
An experienced Manager is required who
can determine the necessary programmes
of work study activity ana ’
— who has the
drive to ensure their successful imple-
mentations.
The successful applicant is likely to be a
corporate member oF I.S.W.P. with an
H.ti.C. and between 50 and 40 years of
age.
The salary will reflect the importance
that the Company places on this appoint-
ment.
Applications should be addressed to :
V. J. Sivycr, Dei an air Limited, Heater
Factory, Abbey Road, Barking, Essex.
STRESS ANALYSIS & FATIGUE SPECIALISTS
Due to expansion the Engineer in
vacancies and a vacancy far an
iginccring Sciences Dala Unit has tbe above
far an Acoustician. The Unit has a team of
professionally qualified engineers engaged in the evaluation, analysis
correlation and presentation of data for aeronautical, 8
chemical and mechanical engineering.
The posts will prove attractive to cngineers/scientists
aged 25-32 with degrees, or equivalent qualifications, and
with at least 2 years’ design or similar industrial
experience.
Please write giving fidl details to :
Dr. A. J. Barrett, Managing Director,
ENGINEERING SCIENCES DATA UNIT LTD-
251*259 RegVnt Street, London, WIR 7 AD.
DISPLAYED APPOINTMENTS
also appear today on
PajJ es 21,-22, 23 &. 24
PRODUCTION CONTROLLER
The vacancy is in South Wales where the
Company is engaged in the manufacture of
high-technology products. The successful
applicant will be responsible for the tota]
production control activity.
Candidates, probably under 30, should have
supervisory experience in a production
control function in an engineering jobbing
•plant. An engineering training is essential.
Salary will be negotiable about £2.000.
Prospects for advancement are good.
Generous re-location assistance will be
available.
Write to P.C.18012, Daily Tdvaraph, E.C.4.
—
we are expanding our planning team (or work in
con neaion With therapiial programme - mam
project 830-bed teaching hospi wl Secnnri
"*»> i. sr
final phase is being planned.
Sankey-Sheldon
Office Innovators
This is no small claim, Sankey-Sheldon are
the largest, mon advanced producers of
office furniture and equipment in Britain;
their products can furnish any modem
office from top to bottom — in style.
Re-organiration of our sales force has created
fresh and challenging opportunities for
successful businessmen, aged 25 - 35, in the
1 oil owing areas:-
LONDON; one for S.E. Home .
Counties, Hampshire,
West Sussex and Surrey
excluding Croydon area.
One for East Anglia,
Norfolk, Cambridge
and N. Essex.
Based on Glasgow.
. . , Based on Bristol.
A good salary plus realistic commission Is .
offered together with company car, four
St*** after on ® Year, pension schema
and free life assurance.
Apply in writing giving full details to:-
A J. Benn, Staff Administration Officer,
gkn sankey limited,
Albert Street, Bilston, Staffs.
SCOTLAND:
SOUTH WALES:
GKN-Britain's largest
international "
engineering group
CAPITAL PROJECTS MANAGER
SALARY: £3,165 -£3,900 (Scale 24)
2?5 W, 'i S ! >0a * d th f pl 1 nni " 9 ,eani with overall
responsibility for the planning and construction of
all capital projects. Co-ordinate our activities Zxh
the Design Team and Contractor; prepare and
up-date programmes etc. H ana
Qualifications: Ideally, Experience of networks and
SEfi 0 *. 0 "* * onS L 0 1 1 ' hospiti,r P'^ning ancTthe
ability to lead and integrate teams oF specialists.
Further particulars of the post and an application
nno 01** ^ 0bta,ned from tho Secretary
” od " ev Streei Liverpool Li 9A».AppUeatiom
16,h T
Keep Soles Moving
>9
this motti
Our recent expansion has been » successful that m
URGENTLY require
SIX experienced salesmen
We Offer;
1- SALAItY
j fg
a- field MSflSfaSgS?' ‘Mradg?™
We require:
2- age 23-40. as fan training given.
*■ ^CCATION;
POSTAL DISTRICTS^ 1, VACAKT p WUWB LONDQ]
W Dt rector,
Machines Limited.
* Lppfion. JB -C%
TcL; 01-283 1T28/2335.
J,
r-’-'V
• • r J
- V
; JU
TU
:jc
• =■ >■
k:>r
W«.w
Si ar.
• Sl! -=*i;e
: . . .
p*f
s
v >/
The Daily Telegraph, Friday. July 2S.IST1 21
PA ADVERTISING
REPLIES. Unless orhnwiMsu ted. plasss send comprehensive careerdstails u> the
PA Advertising office indicated, quoting the raleienoe number on the envelope.
Replies, which should not refer to previous correspondence with PA. wilt be
forwarded direct, unopened and in confidence to the dient unless addressed to
our Security Manager listing companies to which they may not be sent.
2 Albert Gate
Knightsb ridge
London $W1
Tel: 01-235 6060
Chamber of Commerce
House. Harbome Road
Birmingham B15 3DJ
Tel: 021 -454 5731
Sl James's House
Charlotte Street
Manchester Ml 4DZ
Tel: 061 -237 4531
14 Manor Place
Edinburgh EH37DD
Tel: 031 -226 4481
; Chief Accountant
London
Up to £4,500
Qualified
: Accountant
• c £3,500
Financial
^ , Accountant
f ... South Lancashire
FINANCE AND ACCOUNTANCY
Merchandising
Manager
seeks a qualified Accountant who is keen to play a part In the
have not less than 5 The successful applicant will probably be aged between 30 and 37 and will
be responsible for tbl ,ed e *P erienM * preferably in a modern industrial or commercial environment. He will
°' . ,B ■ B “ unt «« Procedures; advising management on the Imroducdon of new
Company’s auditmlancT»lteto4! requ " ed ’ lhe rnan3flament of unqualified accounting staff and liaison with the
ffi^Dos^fhtv^F^ramrfn! j 4 * 500 ls envisaged ; there are prospects of a board appointment In due course and
_the possibility of participation in the equ.ty ol the Company. (London Office: Ref. 1/A1012/DT Chief)
SEhEdSfL" “ mPanV ' ,a “ nc ' * Qua| i' i!d
efmodern reoon'and^w^ft^f ^S 0 * 1 w ' l, ! l ba es P® c| ally attractive to candidates who are familiar with the installation
techniques. P 601 001,0 procedures together with the development of budgeting and variance analysis
Starting salary will be negotiable around £3,500 and there will be realistic assistance with relocation expenses.
(Lond on Office: Ref. Z/K7204/DT Accountant)
has become vacant with an expanding company in the consumer
sound industrial p*™.™ a" ^ T 1 ? ? ap , able y° un 9 accountant is needed, preferably qualified and with
an advantage. P ** h company is looking into computer applications, a knowledge of EDP would be
pradu«r o n n ‘ i S™mh| ,anI wi,, - b * res P pnsibI ® to the Group Financial Controller, and his principal task will be the
management h operating statements, budget comparisons and other regular and ad hoc information for
goooTm a‘ gro wt h 'si tuai i on ne0O,iated and ""“"B condition include a pension fund and life cover. Prospects are
BOOO m growth s.tuat.on (Manchester Office: Ref. 3/D9235/DT Financial)
SALES AND MARKETING
on-strea^rT foM ^1 n r3 r 3n »^ "l'* “ mpany - W " h over 110 sh °P s throughout Britain and 20 more
for a man wiTh <flS - f nd n “ vv requira a Merchandising Manager This is a now appointment
We have a verv conil^w ex P erwnc * with a major consumer goods company and/or retailing organisation.
enormoSJ ° f ' e ? SOnab,y straightforward promotions (one every two/four weeks) and an
for the rmolemnnrifmn d if ° f d,Sp ay tickets and show cards. The Merchandising Manager will take responsibility
ThVmanTJ w/n. f. ML a " '"- st0 ^ prom u ° 1,ons deluding ticketing and point-of-sale display
a£d wnhin ii^ bI,^!l b ^ n g ^ 0 H d ^?i, anrl ^ er-h K • 90t lo makB sure "’a 10 " 81 is P foduced - delivered and installed on time
aoods ai ths tech k mcian— he 8 ?ot to deal with printers and p.o.s. manufacturers, getting the right
fn fact a very goc^ alf rounded ^ creative-he's got to brief visualisers. ticket writers, pasta-up mea etc
□lease J ? b * nd K want » l«" most progress.ve retailing companies in the country, then
High Street °Edgware Mfadle'ex 9 ° ,reCt ° r DiX ° nS Ph0t ° 9raphic Ltd D,xon House ' 18 ’ 24
satec
Technical Manager/
Director Designate
Water Pollution Control
Factory
Manager
Leisurewear
Graduates for
Production
Management
Up to £2 750
WATER POLLUTION
Satec Limited is a subsidiary company of Air Products Limited and has an established international reputation In the
design and supply of process treatment plant principally in the domestic and industrial effluent purification field
We have recently centralised all our operations in a new office and laboratory facility situated on the outskirts of Craws
in Cheshire. We are now committed to a rapid expansion programme which will extend our present activities into
other areas of environmental control through our own research and development, by licensing arrangements and by
acquisition of companies In allied fields.
We now wish to appoint a Technical Manager/Director Designate who will have complete responsibility for all
processengineering activities including research and development for the implementation of our expansion programme
He will conduct investigations and make recommendations on new processes and products for die Company and Us
overseas subsidiaries and 1 lean sees. It is envisaged that ha will be appointed to the Board after a short induction
period with the Company.
Applicants should have an honours degree in Chemistry, Biochemistry or Chemical Engineering and some years
e'xperience either with process plant designers or consulting engineering organisations. Remuneration will ba attractive
to those currently earning over £4,000 and the Company will pay a substantial car allowance and other fringe benefits
including generous relocation assistance if required.
Applications should be addressed to* The Managing Director, Satec Limited. P.O. Box No. 12, Weston Road
Crewe, CW1 IDE.
PRODUCTION
A well-known manufacturer of knitted outerwear has a vacancy for a Factory Manager. Based in the East Midlands,
the company is well established and has ambitious growth plans. The factory concerned is manufacturing cut and
sewn outerwear and shins.
The Factory Manager will report to a Director. In addition to managing a mainly female work force of 1 50, ha will be
responsible for material stock and quality control, plant maintenance and the supervision of work on buildings and
equipment. Present output is 1.000 dozens per week and plant capacity exists for the Factory Manager to bring
about an increase to 1 .500 dozens per week in fine with marketing plans.
Essential requirements are experience of production management in the garment Indusoy. a working knowledge of
method srudy and work measurement and familiarity with the relevant management control techniques. Candidates
should be aged under 45.
There are excellent prospects for the right man who will be joining a vigorous management team at a time of rapid
growth. The initial salary will be £3.000 with normal fringe benefits.
(Birmingham Office. Ref 4/S3031/DT Manager)
This is an attractive career opportunity near London with a well known Company which has a turnover in industrial
products exceeding £10m and is part of an international Group
Graduates with about four years* experience in production. 8t least ona of which should have been m the management
role, are being sought to strengthen the production management team and provide for succession In the near future
at plant and factory manager level. Ideally they should have read mechanical production or chemical engineering
be aged between 25 and 30. and have worked in process manufacturing.
Starting salary will be negotiated up to £2750 career development prospects are excellent, and assistance will be
given with relocation expanses (London Office Ref 5/K7206/DT Graduates)
Although at this stage
anonymous, we are in
fact a nationally known
company selling our
products through the
grocery and allied trades.
Applications for this
senior appointment are
invited but only from
those who completely*
satisfy the following
prerequisites - please
check carefully — *no
exceptions please
1) Age 35-40
2) Sound educational background
and qualification
3) High I.Q. with a dynamic
personality
4) Excellent record of personal
selling at high level
6) Progressive record in sales
management up to and including
control of a national sales force
selling to grocery outlets
6) Knowledge of the "marketing"
function — including agency brief
7) Currently earning £3,000-
£4.500 per annum plus car
8) Ability to move home within 6
months
9) Dean bin of health and driving
licence
10) Finally a man who knows himself
and can accurately assess others
Having decided you are 1 0 out of 1 0
then please write you r initial
application giving details under the
above numbered check list
You will be invited to meet us in
London during week beginning
August 9th or 1 6th 1 971.
All replies will be dealt with in the
strictest of confidence by the
Personnel Director
SJM8022. Daily Telegraph, E.C.4.
NATURE CONSERVANCY
Geologlsf/Physiographer
Salary Range £1162-£2703
Gesfogisf/Physiograpfier
Salary Range £741 -£2177
A Geologist/Physlographor (Scientific Offieer/Senior
Scientific Officer) and an Assistant Geologist/
Physiographer (Assistant Experimental Officer/
Experimental Oft ice r) are required tor the Nature
Conservancy's Ceologv and Physiography Section at
Fox hold House. Crookham Common, Newbury, Berks.
The work ot the Section includes the inspection
evaluation, selection and conservation of areas of .
geological importance, the provision of relevant advice
and liaison with Government. University and other
geologists and geographers end with landowners. The
duties do not include geological and physiographical
research.
Pension arrangements
Qualifications and Experience
Scientific Officer Class: First or good second dass
honours degree (or equivalent! in Geology and/or
Physical Geography preferably with relevant post
graduate experience. .
Experimental Officer Class: CCE (or equivalent) m five
subjects two of which must be appropriate scientific
Suttee (5 at 'A' level: at age 22 or over candidates
must have a pass degree (or equivalent) m
Geclcgy and. ’or Physiography. ....
Candidates must also hold a current driving licence
and must be prepared to work throughout Great
Britain. An Interest in photography is also desirable.
Application forms and further particulars from
E r ‘ablishments (S)» The Nature Conservancy, 19
Eel? rave Square. London SW1 X SPY quoting
reference P 503/3 (50 post) or P503/2 (Exo. O. post).
Clnrig date 23 Aug.. 1971.
NATURAL ENY8QNMENT RESEARCH COUNCIL
Work Study Engineer
S.W. London
A large toy manufacturing company has recently created
several interesting vacancies for qualified and experienced
Work Study Engineers, to be based at their Wimbledon
factory.
Applicants should:
* Be under 50 years of age. ... _ , _ ,
jit Educated to a minimum of ONC(Mech.orrrod. Eng.}.
* Have completed a recognised training in Wort/Metnod
Study and be a member of the Institute of Work Study
* Here ^had^co ns id arable experience In Work/ Method
Study including Work Measurement and the maintenance
of incentive bon us schemas.
The selected applicants will be responsible to the Chief
Work Study Engineer for providing a service m Line Manage-
ment in various parts of the establishment.
An attractive salary will be paid together with excellent
conditions of amp! oyme.it.
Please apply in writing, giving full details of age. education
and career to dale, to: Mr . E . G . A. Poke.
personnel Manager.
Tn-ang Pedigree Limited.
Mordan Road.
Merton. London, S. W.1 9.
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY —
manacing director
pninr Secretary (aged 2&-W) r«juired by
kuwing Director of major Civil Engineering
iimoanv in Croydon area Applicants, who
inuld be first class shorthand, typists, must
ave worked at director level and .be .used
? working on o«n initiative. This is a
fftnanent and Pensionable post and a com-
U'n&urate salary will be Offered. Hobday
ran dements bonoured.
„r>i v in writing, giving details of age, experi-
icV and sciiary required, to :
d. 5. Mansey. Personnel Officer,
' ,„ii rjesl Cementation Group Services lkl,
;i, V Mitriasn Soad, Croydon. CR9 SAP.
.W .-in her of the Trafalgar House Group.
EXPERIENCED
MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTANT
required by an industrial holding company situated
in Crawley. The succest-ful applicant will probably
be over 55 years of age and must g have a forceful
snd dynamic peisonglity, orfeanUahona) ability aoa
capublc of accepting i esponsibility direct to Board
level A salary will be p-id which is commensurate
with a pi oven record of ability.
aodIv in writing to: Financial Director, Cura®
industrial investments Limited. 24 The Boulevard,
Crawley, Sussex,
Pre-Production
Manager
Computer peripherals c £3,500
plus a major share in a breakthrough
We're a new company backed by The Rank
Organisation and formed to manufacture and market
a range of sophisticated new equipment that will
speed up and simplify the process of data prepara-
tion. Aimed at the dynamic peripherals sector of the
computer industry, the potential is enormous.
As Pre-Production Manager you'll hold a key
job, critical lo the company's development You'll
control the running of the pilot plant with direct
responsibility to the Technical Manager for proving
assembly methods and test procedures, ensuring
highest quality standards and, of course, meeting
production targets.
We are, therefore, setting our sights high.
You’ll certainly be a Chartered Engineer with a
background in Development or Production Engineer-
ing in the Electronics industry. You should now be
managing your own production unit, utilizing the
latest techniques in the assembly of sophisticated •
digital electronic equipment. We doubt whetherany-
one under’30 will fit the bill but by all means prove us
wrong.
The starting salary Is negotiable around £3,500
p.a. and there are fine prospects with a strongly based
company set on becoming a major force in to- -
morrow's electronics.-
To apply for this outstanding opportunity, please
write, with full details, to: |ohn Raisin, Controller of
Personnel, Rank ENM, Queensway,
dfiR-N Enfield, Middx., or 'phone 804 8121 for
F T an application form.
rf RANK ENM >
TOP SALES ENGINEER (CABLES)
To become part of a team of highly trained and
highly mobile specialist Sales Engineers operating
mainly in the aeiospace find computer industries.
He will have:
— A strong and adaptable personality.
— Commercial flair.
— An eagerness to «eam and the ability, to
“ digest" technical r=jita quickly itrauung given
in UJL and France).
— Above alL he will be expected to be self-snffi-
dt-nr. with an outstanding ability to discuss
unusual technical problems ^at all levels and
to solve them "on u.e *|»oL
Additional assets would be qualifications _ in
electrical, mechanical or chemical engineering
IH.N.C- degree or equivalent). Experience m
cable field onlv relevant if connected with
sophisticated cables.
Age not imporlant but this job will entail a fair
amount of travelling.
Usual fringe benefits.
Attractive salary, company car, bonus s chem e.
Please contact in first instance:
Mrs. Green.
SOIHUU LECTRPON LTD,
Shirley Avenue, Vale Road. Windsor, Berks.
TcL Windsor 5M7L
i ^ y •' "-Am n
Mars lim ited is a member of an international group of companies which is amongst the largest manufacturers of
confectionery in the world. We are based at Slough and our products include Mars. Bounty, Milky Way, Galaxy,
Maltesers. Ripple, ap«f Opals.
Manufacturing
Management
£ 3 , 000 - £ 4,000
The manufacturing side of our Mannfartnrlnjr and
Engineering Division is responsible for the
production of oar products to high quality standards
within a controlled budget. This requires men who
have the technical ability to control continuous
production machinery combined with a practical
approach t o ttHM) mBTiagRmi»nL
We would be Interested to bear from men who are
making some headway in their priodaction careers ,
but who fed ready for greater respons ib ilit i es in a
more stimulating environment. They will probably be
around 28 and have bad some years’ experience in a
manufacturing or process company since graduating
in engineering cc an allied scientific discipline. Man
management skills will count more than direct
experience in food processing, and non-graduates with
the right background will be considered.
The successful candidates will undergo a short
fr aming pprinri, flftwr which *h p y will aagnnM*
•omplete responsibility for the management of a
prnd nrKon nr main txnanro chift in .-iru» rtf nnr
factories at Slough.
Our Printing Department produces the greater
part of our wrappers and is a well established,
integral part of our manufacturing operation.
Printing is earned out by the gravure process and
oar ancillary conversion techniques in^Tnrio
lamina ring an H wax coating.
We are looking for an experienced mao to fill the
position of Printing Manager. The successful can-
didate will probably be aged between 27-35 and
have had several years’ experience of mtary
E ivure printing in a ma«i=»p»m«n» position. A
ow ledge of modern, flexible packaging tech-
niques would be useful as would a technical
qualification, e-g. B.Sc. Printing or a Full
Technological Ce rtifica te in Printing.
The initial salary will depend npon the individual
appointed, it will be within a range which rises
from £3.000 — £5.000 per annum. The prospects
for a man who can prove his worth in this position
will not be restricted by his specialist background-
Printing -
Dept. Manager
£ 3 , 000 -£ 5,000
A non -contributory social security scheme provides tick, pay, pension, life assurance and four weeks' animal
holiday. Assistance will be given with honse purchase and removal expenses.
If you would like to discuss these vacancies farther, please send brief details of your experience and qualifications to:
Tnm Harrison, Personnel Department, Mars Limited, Dundee Road, Slongh, Backs. Tel: Skmgb 23933
Mars
Technical
Sales
Engineer
Teddington Aircraft Controls Limited re-
quire a man with a good knowledge of the
aircraft industry, with particular regard to the
accessory field.
Responsible to the Sales Manager, he will
In turn be responsible for the sales of the
company's products and the establishment and
maintenance of good relations with existing and
potential customers.
This position will Interest a man currently
earning in the region of £2.200. He will enjoy
the sort of benefits expected of a successful
organisation, which include company car and
pension scheme.
This is a very responsible position, re-
quiring a man with a good technical back-
ground (preferably in a similar field) with the
ability to work on his own initiative.
Applicants are invited to write, giving full
career details, to Mr. David Lawrence at the
address below now.
Teddington Aircraft
Controls Limited,
Manor Works,
Rowan Road.
London. S.W.1 6.
■ Todt
MARKETING
MANAGER
LONDON
• Salary about £4,000 • Age 30-45
A srabsidiary within an international civil
engineering group is making this new appointment
to increase sales by introducing modem marketing
methods. Present turnover is in the region of
three trillion pounds but growth potential could
double this within two years. The successful
candi date will be expected to set-up a complete
marketing department within the. framework of the
existing organisation, which specialises in products
and services involving inspection and corrosion
activities provided on a global basis to engineering
and construction industries.
The man appointed will be responsible to the
executive dL ectors for tie control and motivation
of the UJK. sales force and the overseas
and associated companies. Candidates, ideadJy
graduates in electrical engineering, mwt have
demonstrated their ability in successful market
research and also have experience of top level
negotiation. They should also have had effective
control of a sales force in the UJL A Company
car will be provided and career prospects are
excellent.
Applications in writing, giving full details , of
career to date, qualifications and salary require-
ments to;
The Staff Recruitment Division,
Stephens Advertising Service. Ltd*
37. Golden Square, London, ffl
Menswear Buyer
Knitwear and Outerwear
We wish to appoint a Buyer responsible far the
selection and purchase, of our range of men’s knit-,
wear and heavy -outerwear including casual
jackets, etc.
He will be fully responsible for the selection arid
profitability of this important part of our range of-
merchandise.
There Is great potential for Increasing turnover in
a growth company. Promotion prospects are,
therefore, excellent.
Sound experience In buying and merchandising for
the mass market is essential. Mail order or central
buying experience in fashion men’s wear would be
an advantage.
Age range 25-40. Minimum salary £2,500 p-a.
Assistance with re-location expenses will be given
and there are excellent fringe benefits.
Please send, a written account of relevant in-
formation to:
R. W. Johnson,
Senior Personnel Officer,
Freemans (London S.W.9) Ltd-,
139, Clapham Road,
London, S.W.9.
The initial salary is negotiable, but will be attractive
to ttxe right man and competitive with, current industrial
There are good Pension and Life' Assurance Schemes
and opportunities for advancement and career develop-
ment within the Group are excellent.
Please write in confidence, giving details of education,
qualifications and experience Ur. The General Manager,
GENERAL GUARANTEE CORPORATION LTD.
require additional
New Business Representatives
in the Greater London Area to continue their
expansion programme. A good commencing
salary is offered and a car and usual fringe
benefits are provided. Men aged between 25
and 45 years with Hire Purchase experience and
good Hire Purchase connections in the . motor
and plant and machinery business should apply
in writin g giving full particulars to:
R. G. Smith-THley. Director,
General Guarantee Corporation Ltd*
Ambassador House,
Brigstock Road, Thornton Heath, Surrey.
A Greet Universal Stores Group Company
Food
Development
Technologist
FRINT PRODUCTS
c. £2,(00
A leading international c o m pan y wishes
to appoint a Senior Development Technologist
to develop new fruit products. He will also
be involved in experimental planning and
policy making in connection with new
P roducts, and will be responsible to the
ethnical Manager. He wul be based in
the Greater London area but some
travelling throughout the TJX. will be
necessary.
This is an outstanding opportunity for a
man with practical and technical
experience of the fruit processing industry.
He should have a good Natural Science
degree, or its equivalent. There are
excellent prospects for advancement within
this expanding company.
The company has a contributory pension
s c he m e and the usual fringe benefits.
Assistance with removal expenses will be
given if necessary.
Your application will be
treated m the strictest
confidence. Please write or.
telephone fen* an application
form to :
Mr. A ndrew Trotman,
JWT Recruitment
Services, (FD/DTj;
Moor House. London Wall,
London. EC2Y 5HS.
Telephone: 01-666 8148.
JWT
ACCOUNTANT FOR
CALAIS, FRANCE
i.- S 7 - • '
Around £2,500. Career , .
Progress in Common Market
A British company which has international interests
and is a major supplier to the motor Industry,
requires a recently qualified accountant for its new
factory at Calais.
After initial training in the U.K., tha successful
candidate will be responsible for all financial and
management accounting at the rapidly
expanding Calais Factory.
Applicants must have some knowledge of French
and an aptitude for languages; since this
appointment should lean in two or three years, to
a senior position in the Group, based in either
France ..Germany or the U.K.
Applications giving full details of qualifications and
career to date, may ba accompanied by a covering
note listing organisations to which you do not
wish your name to be forwarded. Write in strict
confidence to: J. Deacon, Senior Appointments
Officer, Ref: 29/ B, Promark Management
Confidential Reply Service, Old Colony House,
South* K ing Street. Manchester M2 6DU.
Promark Management
Confidential Reply Service
22 The Dtdlg Telegraph, Frida*, fe fr 197 l
i 7 —
Group Marketliig
Development
Officer • Zambia
£3,750 -£4,350
The Indeco Trading Group
The Croup is that part of the State-owned trvdeco . -•
Ltd. which controls the activities of .[ IV ®. C °^' I |^S
companies engaged in both the retail and wholesale
activities. Outlets exist throughout the country,
in the form of Department Stores, Supermarkets,
urban and rural stores {which cater for the sparsely
populated areas) as well as travelling show attached
toa national wholesale corporation which is also
part of the Group.
The job
The Croup Marketing Development Officer will be
Involved at senior level in the fomnulahon of Group
business strategy, with the specific objective ot
ensuring planning and development of medium and
long term growth patterns. He ^illbe concerned
with analyse* and investigations leading to P^hcal
recommendations in the fields of group merchandising
and marketing, development of sales outlers,
distributive channels, sales and turnover strategy as
well as with stock controls. He will be accountable
to the Group Managing Director, and through him,
work to achieve the objectives as defined above.
The Successful Applicant
Aged 25-40, with a degree background, preferably
in Business Administration and Marketing.. He
should possess a high degree of financial analytical
skill and should be familiar with the statistical
techniques of marketing function, forecasting and
analysis, and have a record of success in the financial
planning sales field. A sound knowledge and
understanding of the general sales and distribution
function through brand management or agency ,
research experience plus some field sales exposure
preferably in the retail /wholesale .consumer trade
will be useful. He should be energetic, self motivated,
creative and have qualities ot leadership.
The Conditions
A generous salary, related to experience and
qualifications will be paid. Other benefits include a
gratuity of 20% of salary on completion of contract,
which is likelv to be of 3 years' duration. The
incumbent will be based in Lusaka which is a modem
and pleasant city providing facilities for recreational
and cultural pursuits.
« I Applications giving details of qualifications
I rfi S *** 1 ar, d experience should be sent to:
oit -basic salary scal es and allowances. Terms of service usually include free family passages, paid leave, education grants and subsidised
accommodation. In most cases a terminal gratuity of 25% ra payable and appointments are on contract to the Governments of the
countries concerned for an Initial period .of 2-3 yean. Applicants should normally be citizens of, and permanently resident in, the
United Kingdom. F |JI ZAMBIA
SEYCHELLES Senior Legal Officer Resident Magistrates
Assistant (Office of the £2,434-3,384
Attorney General Sflliritflf To hold a Court of Summary jurisdiction
JAn M vwiivilwi WW1IWI “V dealing with a very wide range of criminal
t3„493 £1 AAA 1 I AH Cases; to take civil trials including jurisdic-
* fcZjWTT 1 yj ■ vv tion In monetary cases up to K.-iOO.
To advise Government Departments; appear- The rendering of advices on civil matters to Magistrates may also be required to act as
ing for the crown In criminal cases and Ministries and Departments of Government; . Coroner, District or Deputy Registrar of the
tha Government of Seychelles in civil suits; • and the procession of civil, claims by. and High Court, and to undertake any other
drafting of legislation and agreements. . against the Government; the representation such duties as may be allocated to them
by the Judiciary or the Government.
BJLR
Bock
JAMAICA
Legal Officer
£ 4,696
m
The Managing Director,
Indeco Trading Limited,
P.O. Box 283,
LUSAKA, Zambia.
Agricultural/
Animal Health Products
Fisa ns Limited, Pharmaceutical Division,
have a great opportunity for a top-class
Representative to Join a professional Bnd
highly successful Animal Health Sales Team.
Hewill be responsible forsale^to distributors
and farmers, of a leading range of products
including Imposil 200 and Fisons Sheep Dip
in an area comprising: • • - —
Derby, Nottingham, Lincoln and S. Yorkshire
The successful applicant will receive a comp-
rehensive technics! training in order to advise
on the correct use of our products and will,
in turn, give some training to distributors.
Applications are invited from ambitious men
aged under AO who have had sales experience
in Animal Health or Agriculture, backed up
by a thorough knowledge of farm livestock.
A diploma in agriculture is desirable but not
essential and personal approach and initiative
will be important factors in selection/
An excellent salary plus bonuses and a
Company car are offered together with the
fringe benefits normally associated with a
large international group. Applications
quoting job reference No. 350R should be
addressed to tha Recruitment Personnel
Officer, Fisons Limited, Pharmaceutical
Divisiorv 12 Derby Road{, Loughborough,
Leics.
1 '■ &
- -S
h-t
F
For- the Department of Income "Fax,- Stamp-
Duties and Estate Duties to prepare and
conduct prosecutions in revenue cases.
KENYA
Resident Magistrates
£2,682-3,308
.To be concerned with. the trial and deter-
mination of civil and criminal cases, and
the holding of preliminary enquiries into
cases coming within the jurisdiction of the
High Court, and the related administrative
duties; may also be required to act in other
judicial or legal posts; should have genera)
court experience and an interest in advocacy.
OVERSEAS
Senior Legal Officer Resident Mag
{Office of the £2,434- 3,38-
Solicitor General) ■ £ 1 ^ d J, h c rt v ° , w S
a AA A *2 I&n cases; to take civil trial
_ jV'T*? a WV tion In monetary cas
The rendering of advices on civil matters to Magistrates may also be
Ministries and Departments of Government; . Coroner, District or Dep
• and the procession of civil, claims by. and High Court, and to ur
against the Government; the representation such duties as may be
of the Government in civil causes- and by the Judiciary or the
matters; the negotiation of ' contracts and
agreements on behalf of the Government
and such other legal duties as may be A0Y0C2 lc
MALAWI £2,434-3,384
■ anu-i v w ■ y Q unc jertake civil and criminal litigation
DocSflanf 1 MimefrafA and advice to Government Departments on
nesiaem. naglHiate - all legal matters. Experience is also dcs<r-
4CC ’Z I HO " able in any of the following fields — taxa-
I VO tion legislation, commercial law. mining and
To be concerned with the trial and deter- ! abour legation, [and law and conve v an-:-
mination of both civil and criminal cases, ,n S ^ international law.
and the holding of preliminary enquiries
info cases coming within the jurisdiction of Accf* ArjmJtnsCi'raf’Ar
the High Court, and the related administra- flUISIfiill SUalVI
other judicial or legal b^rtquFred to act in g finera | ant | Official
State Counsel Receiver
£2,455-3,108 £2,434-3,384
To conduct criminal and civil proceedings. To assist the Administrator-General in the
drafting legislation and furnishing opinions administration cl the deceased *nd bankrupt
to all Government Departments. Experience estates. 5 years' experience m admimstra-
In advocacy, general court work and drafting tion of bankrupt and deceased estates
is essential. desirable.
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
DEVELOPMENT ADMINISTRATION
Further information may be obtained about any of these vacancies by writing
briefly stating your age, qualifications and experience to:—
The Appointments Officer, Room 301 A.Efand House, Stag Place, London, SW1 E 5DH
OPTTLON — Zip Fasteners
A DYER
required, by the largest manufacturers of nylon zip fasteners in England,
to complete the Dyebouse technical staff engaged on the dyeing of cotton/
polyamide and cotton/polyester zip fastener tapes in a modem dyehonse
equipped with H.T. Pressure machines.
Technical qualifications will be an advantage, bat ability- to produce first-
class work is the prime consideration. Applicants should preferably be
aged between 25 and 40 years.
The factory is situated in pleasant, rural surroundings within easy reach
of London and close to main shopping centres. Housing assistance would
be considered for a suitable applicant. The appointment is for a permanent
Night Shift 10 p-m.-6 a-m. Monday to Friday.
The Salary will be commensurate with experience and qualifications and"-
carries a generous Shift Allowance.
Applications marked “ CONFIDENTIAL ” and should be addressed to
Dyehouse Manager, OptiJon Limited, * — \
Fen Pond Road, Ighlham, Nr. Sevenoak&y Kent.
A subsidiary Company of the Imperial Metal Industries Ltd.
Socialists in Seam Gas*.
£3,009 pins in Australia
X° n cts a ^
S mining methods, concerning in .particular seam gas
a conditions and methane drainage.
Location is Corrimal. near Wollongong on the New South Wales
coas t_an area of considerable natural beauty.
Free Dassaqes will be arranged, and you will receive a settling-in
*wance 9 plus. if you wish, subsidised housing on amval.
There's also an attractive pension scheme, free life insurance,
and free medical benefits after a short qualifying period.
B HP. Australia's largest company, operates substantial integrated
coalmines and ore quarries, while subsidiaries manufacture a
wide range of steel products, and are involved in many other
activities.
[ A senior member of the Company will be visiting the UK to i
I conduct interviews on Thursday 29th July, please write giving I
1 full details of age. salary, education and expenence. quoting u
J Ref:DEl/Tto: a
H. A. S. Cornell, «
f§| The Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd., ®
IS Hanover House, 14 Hanover Square,
London, W1R ON D.
Sech
GOLF CLUB
HOUSE MANAGER
Cr.-'ll'ni position avmlaW-?
fur m.irried min .bn Wins
lain. ,rii» ftR.J laidailve in:
CATERING
(including Functions)
BAR and STOCK CONTROL
STAFF MANAGEMENT
Mlin 11.2.10 per non am
Dll', rrm <"»■ J-bf dror.m Hat
pl'j. .»■; r.,'erlnn pmfil*.
Tin. r..,|-.«jn nr, 11 id .lilt a
hu bj— 1 and will- working
f.ijpm-r Ip provide good
ru,.,n- and U»r ecnrice.
P|i-j,.inl environment in
Sonlh Went Middices.
RKf-p-n>.es required. Apply
bv teller in confidence with
full information to G.C.
I SO 1 6. Daily Telegraph, 6C4
SECRETARIAL
ASSISTANT
The B.E.T. Group
A vacancy exists in the London Headquarters
Secretariat of the British Electric Traction Group,
for an Assistant to the Secretary of certain of
B.E.T/5 subsidiary companies.
Candidates should hold a recognised accountancy or
secretarial qualification or be studying for their
finals and have a good practical experience of
company secretarial work.
A starting salary of up to £2,500 is envisaged
dependent upon experience and qualifications.
There is a contributory pension scheme.
Applications, with details of age. qualifications and
present and previous appointments, should be sent
in confidence to: —
The Secretary*
The B.E.T. Federation Limited,
Stratton House. Piccadilly, London. W1X 6 AS.
GENERAL FACTORY
MANAGER - CHAIRS
up to £4000 p.a.
for a medium-sized wood and steel
facturer located in the West Country. . Preferred
age 5045. Car provided.
He will be responsible to the Managing
Walsall County Borough Council
Head of Management Services
Under the Government's reorganization
proposals, Walsall County Borough will form
a major Metropolitan District with an
increased area and population. The Council
is engaged in an O&M review of its
departments and it is the Council's intention,
to establish a Management Services unit The
Head of Management Services, who will
have the status and rank of Assistant Town
Clerk, must be capable of obtaining real
improvement through changes in
organization, in the use of resources, and
through improved motivation.
He must therefore have expertise in one or
more of the basic management service skills,
and show evidence of successful change in
a public body or industry. Other desirable
qualifications would include a degree (or
professional qualification), age 35-45, and
experience as head of a management
services unit .
The benefits offered are:-
■ A salary of at least £3,600 p.a.
(negotiable)
■ Contributory pension
R Temporary housing accommodation
(if required)
■ Appropriate removal expenses
Please write to us stating current salary and
how you meet our Client's requirements,
quoting reference HMS/3130/DT on both
envelope and fetter. No information will be
disclosed to our Client without permission.
Urwick, 0rr& Partners Limited -
"2 Cfrttiii Sf. L orrdCn. SWTh JOE;
Avon’s story is one of continuing success and growth. To help us
maintain this we wish ro make two appointments to our Marketing team ia
this field. A degree or equivalent qualification will be of considerable
value in both cases.
Senior Development
Appointment
Responsible tor the projection and
control of the Marketing team’s
packaging development objectives,
within certain categories. He will be
er.-pcctcd to make a significant con-
Prodact Administration
Appointment
Responsible for the packaging
development of specified product
groups in conjunction with product
marketing and technical services.
Applicants ideal! v should have some
e:.-pccted to make a significant con- Applicants ideally should have &
tribution through the development of packaging experience, but those
new packaging concepts. Applicants w ith general marketing experience
must have three to (out years in last mov ing consumer goods will
packs ging/purchasi ng experience in be considered,
fast moving consumer goods.
A salary to match these responsibilities will be paid together with
relocation expenses. All other excellent benefits are non-contributory.
Please write or telephone for an application form to :-
A-w- — \ John Crozicr, Senior Personnel Officer,
/\ % /H B 1 I Avon Cosmetics Limited,
/— 'w \ u £ H Nunn MilLs Road, Northampton.
-A. JL-Y V_/X JL Tel ; Northampton 10604; 34722 Ext- 24t.
moh
Potterton
REGIONAL
SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY TRAINING BOARD
Senior Training Officer
North West Region
The Job
To be responsible to the Chief Training Officer for the Board's north west
region and to provide a training service at all levels to shipbuilding, ship-
repair and boatbuilding firms.
Location
Upton, Cheshire.
Qualifications
Applicants should be aged 30-45 and Have several years* industrial and
training experience, preferably in the shipbuilding or boatbuilding industries.
Salary
Starting salary In the range £2,600-£2,800 p.a. Contributory pension
scheme. A car will be provided.
Write or telephone 101-422 9581) for application form and job
description to: The Secretary,
SHIPBUILDING INDUSTRY TRAINING BOARD.
Raebarn House, Northolt Road. South Harrow, HA2 0DR, Middlesex.
Closing date tor compic>cd applied lions 6 th August. 1971.
PLANT
ENCINEER
Applications are invited for the above posL The
successful candidate will be experienced in the
control of all aspects of works engineering, plant
maintenance, plane layout and the control and
motivation of the maintenance personneL
This vacancy is with an engineering company
producing capital equipment, with approximately
1.000 employees. The location is in the North
Midlands.
Salary commensurate with experience and qualifi-
cations.
Write in the first instance, slating present salary
and giving full .details of .career to dafe. to
PX.1S014, Daily Telegraph, E.C.4.
WORKS MANAGER
STEEL STOCKHOLDING
CouHnho Steel Co, Ltd. Is a newly established and
substantial company of steel stockholders, stocking mOd
gtcel sections, plates, reinforcing bars, etc We have
large premises in tfic East End of London, and we are
part of an International steel group. For the position
of Works Manager, the successful applicant will have
gained his expenence in a similar position and will be
responsible to the Managing Director for the whole oT
[he works side of the business. He must have experience
of labour, warehouse layout, transport and equipment
purchase and maintenance.
This Is a Challenging opportunity to participate in the
*HL stHces In btnldlns up a busy and growing busmen,
fflent lia tV tonus ^scheme, company -.ar. non-
SfSbSo^l &n ^ Iunche0 ° vauchers -
Applicatkjns in writing to.
The ManafiaR °ire«o r -
COliTiNHO - 5TEEL , c0 -
Thames Wharf, Dock Bead. London. £.18 1AF.
medical
representatives
Dista Products Limited, an important affiliate
of a world wide pharmaceutical house, have
vacancies for salesmen in the following areas;
Bedford
Bristol
London North and Central
London South West
Applicants should be aged between 25 and 35 and must possess
a minimum of 2 A Levels in science subjects. A degree or
teaching diploma would be an added advantage. Most of our
existing management team began their careers as salesmen,
therefore these vaaneiu represent an outstanding opportunity
for later advancement to sales and marketing management. The
successful candidates will join a training course on October 4th,
1971, By industry standards, the negotiable salary and the
associated fringe benefits are second to none. A Cortina 1600 L
Saloon is provided for business and private use. The first stop
towards this progressive career will be to write for an
application form to: —
INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS
REQUIRE A
Progress Co-ordinator
This post involves maiulaininq del ailed records
of Ihe present and e\|»ecled progress of all
lilies from coniinfostoning to completion.
The post needs ability to cope in an orderly way
with considerable volumes of detailed
information and the personal qualities needed
to liaise with a wide range of individuals and
departments. The co-ordinator, in addition to
recording information and issuing reports,
will be expected to play a positive role in
influencing the successful progress of critical
titles. Whilst publishing eMM'fience will be.
relevant it is not essential, but candidalcs should
be painstaking, energetic, resourceful and
lactful. A genemus salary will be negotiated.
Prospects arc considerable and there are
good conditions of service, inrludin? a pension
scheme. Write in confidence for an application
form to
THE MANAGING DIRECTOR.
THAMES AND HUDSON LTD.,
30/54 Bloomsbury Street, London wcle 3 qp. *
MANAGER
LONDON £3000+
Potterton Limited Is a member of the De La
Rue Group famous for its domestic and
commercial heating equipment and now
also in the air conditioning field. Annual
turnover is in excess of £14 million. The
Commercial Division, in which this vacancy
occurs markets a wide range of the
Company's larger product^ including cast
iron and steel boilers and air conditioning
units and is expanding rapidly. Sales are
negotiated at a high level with consultants*
national heating contractors and
Government departments.
They now need a Regional Salss Manager
reporting to the General Sales Manager to
be responsible for the achievement of
targeted sales in London and the South of
England. The job will involve the supervision,
motivation and control of a small field
force and meeting a personal sales target
The successful candidate will probably be
aged 27-40, educated to 'HNC level and
preferably MIHVE. and have both personal
selling and management experience in
heating, ventilating and air conditioning or a
related field. However those with management
experience in design or manufacturing in
this area could also be considered.
A starring salary of about £3000 is
envisaged together with a sizeable
incentive bonus. The attractive benefits
include a company car, contributory
pension, free life assurance, BUPA schema
and 4 weeks holiday.
Telephone or write
for an application form
quoting reference ITP/3 to:
Philip Regan
Marketing Selections Limited,
7 Kendall Place London W1 H 3AG
01-935 3378.
Revertex Ltd., is expanding its Textiles Division
which supplies a wide range of natural and
synthetic latices and compounds to the textile
industry and particularly to the carpet industry.
It has immediate vacancies fm positions in both the
technical service and the development departments.
Applicants should be between 25 and 35,
preferably with a degree, but certainly with several
years' experience in latex technology. Experience of
foam would be of special interest to the Company.
A very good salary will be paid and prospects for
further promotion in an expanding and dynamic
international company are very good. A contributory
pension scheme, subsidised B.U.P.A. membership
and luncheon vouchers are some of the
additional benefits.
For an application form and fuller details, please
telephone or write to :
The Secretary to the Group Personnel Manager.
Revertex Limited,
Temple Fields, Harlow. Essex.
Telephone: Harlow 29555
The Personnel Manager, Dlsca Produce Ltd.,
Fleming Road, Speke. Liverpool L24 9LN
cP dista department of the environment
AREA MANAGER
to join a young, enthusiastic and progressive
management tea in operating a national chain of
handbag and fashion accessory shops. Only first-
class applicants will be considered.
The appointment carries an excellent salary, pen-
sion scheme and company car. It will he necessary
to roide ia the Leicester/ Nottingham a.cd and
therefore relocation expenses will be borne by the
company.
Apply for application farm to:
The Personae! Manager,
Salisbury s Handbags limited,
Newton Road, Crawley, Sussex-
ASSISTANT RESEARCH OFFICER
in their Socjolopkdl Kummi'cIi £r.im_h t„ j 0 j„ , m ...
disciplinary team Korkina on Hie hou:,i l1fi iin-ri. AV
d^Uted people. Tu l tidily the im. t L* u,r & "month!
hut tbec mov be upuoriunity h.r s pomia.icnL portion
later. Applicant* -liuuld I«b>c h armil sori rt | \iirnre
ifofiree and prctcrablv practical rutanh exiicriuiire.
the Inner LihuIimi salary ter A- .i:,Unil lu-.-.inli on,r.-r
u tt.IET ns l ii’ m ELI K This i . ai |.rch,-m ,. Il . v ^
The sULLLv-lul L.imJliJJlc woufrt iiurin.illi toinniiinjj at
tite minimum ul tin; -ioIi:.
Apt'ln shoniil be made tu Mr J. w buuri: r
(i mij, D. |i.irimriit of tlicEm iromncin, it UU'i lmihrJ
Rim e, houlhivdrk 5uert, London. S.E.L ^Uipbcr
Leading Inferaational Freight Forwaidinq Company
intends to appoint
2/3 YOUNG ACCOUNTANTS
to substantive posts.
Intelligence + Grit, Ambition
Sir “ portant tha °
Ful! personal details to John Paterson
Personnel Admin.. ZOO, SI. Martin’s Tjme’
London WX.2, or phona 856-8746 for toter-
\icw with finance Director.
The .DaUg Telegraph, Tridag, July S3, 1S71 23
Opportunities
in East Africa for
Accountants
The posts** detailed below attract financial benefits. They include
I iKTavcb ,emem of salarv ' 8 Qratuity also normally
U.R. 1 AA FREE, free passages, subsidised housing. etc.
Appointments Grant of up to £200 may be payable.
Uganda Government —
Senior Accountant
revi B w a, i l L UP t0 f 330? (includ ' ng '"ducement) + 25% gratuity. Required to
hurw*™ d i m . P ' em0 ? t accounting systems and procedures, supervise
® ^ ® nd in ^ Br nal control, certificate union accounts, approve annual
.® a ? l - ta x l ®*P endiTure estimates, render managerial advice and
prepare statistical information feasibility/profitability studies or reports
»vn 0 , at6 1: ,CA * ACCA * !C WA. must have had at least three years
(R^ M35v70O70T’/DA° SlliOn ^ * lar96 f ‘ rm ' L ® 9al Uainm9 advant8 9eous.
Uganda Government —
Lecturer in Accountancy
m „« S K^Q P ir°A £3 A 3 ^i ind ^ n9 Inducement) + 25% gratuity. Candidates
must be CIS. 1CA. ACCA. or B.Com. with a major in accountancy and at least
three years experience.
In addition to lecturing in basic accountancy, the officer may be required
to advise and assist Co-operative unions and other organisations in their
accountancy work. (Ref.M3A/701 223/DA).
East African Railways —
Mechanical Engineering Accountant
Salary up to £3341 (including Inducement) -f 25% gratuity. Candidates
must be members of a recognised accountancy body, with at least ten years*
experience in engineering/transport, and a sound knowledge of budgeting
control and costing.
The officer will supervise and control the financial and audit functions of
the Engineering Department. (Ref. M3A/71 0703/DA).
For further details and application form write quoting the appropriate
reference to Crown Agents, *M* Division. 4 Millbank, London, S.W.1, stating
name, age and brief details of qualifications and experience.
Electrical/Mechanical
Engineers
£ 3400 +
Roan Consolidated Mines Limited has vacancies for Electrical and Mechanical
Engineers in Zambia.
Engineers are required for general plant engineering work with a maintenance
bias. Successful applicants will be expected to undertake varied assignment*
including planning/project work in surface metallurgical plants, underground or
on engineering services sections associated with mining operations. Candidates
should possess an appropriate degree or equivalent qualification and at least
two years' experience within a heavy processing industry, preferably including
some supervision.
Employment will be on a three years* contract basis initially, the contract being
renewable by mutual agreement Total starting emoluments, which comprise
basic salary, expatriate supplements, annual bonus and terminal gratuity will be
paid in local currency and will depend on experience but will not be less than
£3400. Exchange control allows employees to externalise 50% of monthly
earnings.
Additional benefits include ■ return passages for employee and family
■ housing with basic furniture at low rental ■ baggage and settling -in
allowances ■ generous education allowances ■ 52 days* leave p.a. Employees
enjoy a good standard of living and working conditions in a country with a
healthy, temperate climate and there are excellent facilities for sporting and
leisure activities.
Please write for an application form and information booklet quoting
reference . D-S 3 , to:
7 he Manager.
Overseas Appointments,
RST International Metals Limited l
One Noble Street
London, EC2V IDA.
SALES EXECUTIVE j
(Corrugated Containers)
OUR CLIE NT is an independent company ?
selling corrugated containers in the =
packaging industry. Their growth since jyou j
has been dynamic and the next step is the ■
development of a plant in the Bristol area.
THEY REQUIRE a man, experienced in the I
corrugated container industry, with live coi> j
nections in the counties of Surrey. Middlesex. ,
Berkshire and Buckinghamshire. He will he E
hard-working and self motivating, although. .
he will work closely with Management.
Salary will be by negotiation a° d , w, 'U \
commensurate with what is expected of the =.
man. A fully maintained car is provided and ^
all normal business expenses are paid. There r
is a contributory pension scheme together ,
with free life assurance and membership ol j
B.UPA . . __ \
This is an excellent opportunity for the right ;
man to make a career with a very progressive j
company. :
Initial interviews will he held in LondcA.
Apply re first instance to; [
P. Dodd, /Ref: DT/2)
Regional Manager,
Whites Recruitment Limited,
i Incorporated \
Practitioners to .*>_
If liiftSi
Manch ester 312 7BZ. _**■ ® ”
ZAMBIA
BEECHAM PRODUCTS.
ST. HELENS, LANCS.
(A Branch of Beecham
Croup Limited j
QUALIFIED
PHARMACIST
age irroirp 21-25 years re-
quired as Production
Trainee. Training will be
given in all aspect* of
production, i-e. Manufac-
turing, Packaging, Ware-
housing. etc.
Thi* Is a progressive ap-
pointment and offers ex-
cellent opportunities For
further advancement with-
in the Group.
Five-day week. Profit Par-
ti ri pa lion and Non-Con-
tributory Pension Scheme.
Please apply, in writing, to
the Personnel Manager.
iminicatfons
ice a lions share.
Milton project S
The Company
Compagnie Industrial^ des Telecommuni-
cations SA (CiT) is the largest French
company in telecommunications with a
£60,000,000 turnover, 15,000 employees,
and worldwide operations.
The Project
CIT, in conjunction with its South African
associates, Fulmen Africa Ltd., has a major
contract with South African Railways to
replace its telephone network with register-
translator controlled crossbar switching
equipment throughout the country. There
will be nine trunk-switching centres, ten
intermediate and five local exchanges.' The
equipment — some of which is of new design
■ — is being manufactured in France. Instal-
lation of equipment racks, switchgear,
ironwork, etc., will start early in 1972 and it
is planned for the main exchanges to ba
commissioned in mid-1973.
Appointments
Eighty appointments will be made from the
U.K. of skilled telecommunication engineers
with varying degrees of experience to
complete an international team. Detailed
equipment training of 1-3 months will be
provided in France or South Africa.
Common to all the appointments will be the
requirement to work long hours-^-for which
the remuneration will be substantial. The
terms of employment envisage a normal
working week of 55 hours with up to 70
hours being worked when necessary.
Initial contracts will be for a period of
between 1 2 and 1 8 months, although there
will be opportunities for most staff to extend
this on CIT or Fulmen projects in South
Africa and other countries. Free passages
will be provided for families, income tax is
relatively low, there are medical and other
benefits, and 20 days local leave can ba
taken per annum. Most of the appointments
will take effect between October 1971 and
January 1972.
Zone Managers
£ 6 ^ 00281000 phis car
Zone managers will each be responsible for
about £500,000 of equipment. After a
preliminary period in France, they will go to
South Africa in November/ December to
finalise the organisation for their geo-
graphical areas. They will be assisted by the
project supply and engineering staff, but
Africa
will have complete responsibility for In-
stallation, testing and commissioning, to the
agreed schedules. Candidates should ba
. MJ.E.E, aged 30-45, with previous project
management experience in telecommuni-
cations, preferably including crossbar sys-
tems. Remuneration can be up to £625 per
month — including a bonus related to the
performance of the zone — plus a daily
allowance of about £4 and company car.
Six zone managers are required.
(Ref: TE41 /4269/DT)
Supervisors £S,500-£J500
Installation and inspection supervisors will
report to a zone manager, and be responsible
for sections of about 1 0 men. They should be
aged 30-40, preferably with H.N.C., and
have 5-10 years' experience of modem
telephonic equipment Previous supervisory
responsibility is essentiaL Remuneration can
be up to £525 per month including bonus
plus a daily allowance of about £3.50.
Thirty-five supervisors are required.
( Ref : TE41 /4270/DT)
Testers £5,000-£6,500
Less experienced telecommunications en-
gineers will be recruited who are able to
work an different aspects of the project as
required. They should be aged 25-40 with a
good general equipment knowledge and 2-3
years' experience as testers. They should
now be earning at least £1,500 and probably
£1,750. Remunecation will be not less than
£300 per monthi. but can be up to £450
including overtime, plus a daily allowance of
about £3. Twenty men are required in
December/January, and about twenty Tn
April/May, 1972-j (Ref: TE41/4271/DT)
Interviews will 6e conducted during the
next few weeks to all regional centres:
Applicants ahoiAd forward brief career
details, quoting the relevant reference
number to the address below, or write or
telephone for ao application form, and
advise as if you^have recently made any
other application . !
Hjs:
PA Management
Consultants Limited*
Personnel Services
Division,
Hyde Park House,
Knightsb ridge,
London SW1X7LE.
Tel: 01-235 6060
tap to £1741 p.a.
and all the variety you want
as a RadioTechnickan
Variety is the keyword. As a
Radio Technician with the
National Air Traffic Services, you
would be installing and
maintaining a wide range of
sophisticated electronic systems
and highly specialised equipment.
You would be involved with RT,
radar, data transmission links,
navigation aids, landing systems,
closed circuit T.V. and computer
installations. All custom-built to
meet the stringent operational
requirements of airtraffic control
throughout the U.K.
(fyou'reaged19oroverand have
at least one year's electronics
experience, preferably with O.N.C.
or C. & 6. (Telecoms.), you could
qualify for entry ta our training
course. Your starting salary would
be £1 ,1 43 (at 19) to £1 ,503 (at 25 and
over), scale max. £1,741 - shift duty
allowances. Good career prospects.
Write NOW for full details to:
A. J. Edwards, C.Ertg., Ml EE,
Room 705, The Adeiphi, John
Adam St, London WC2N 6BQ,
marking your envelope
‘Recruitment -B/DT/26 ’.
Noi appnoM* lo ™»w»nl* DoMdttfoUnlW KlDodota.
NATS
National Air Traffic Services
SALES ENGINEER
Sain Enplnrer i* required by
n Itjdinp G'fired Motor
Manufacturer to hAO-Uc the
shIm of Electric Motor!.
Geared Motors and Solid
Siuie Drive* in East Anglia
includinu North East London,
under 45 years ot one.
Applications In wrlUnq with
lull details of career and past
rireer and present salary to
the: —
Personnel Officer,
Noraund Electrical Group
of Cnmpknfes.
Walton Road. L«ltm Road.
Cnsbasn. Portsmouth, Hants.
1*06 1SZ-
SALESMAN
Required for London
a art Home Counties
with experience. Attrac-
tive starting salary _ +
bonus, car and running
expenses. Good pension
scheme.
lVrife to: —
A. T. NUTT. Sales Manager,
TRELLE80RG RUBBER LTD..
124 BARLBY ROAD.
LONDON. W10 6BN.
CONSTRUCTIONAL & MARIN
; Representative —
mtmm Sea/anfs British Paints * Cbe
ao g» se lar/ior in the manufactni
• Career
0 opportunities as
: medical
: representatives
Expansion and promotion in. line
management provide new opportunities
in the Pharmaceutical Division of
Reckitt & Col man for Medical
Representatives in the folio wing areas:
(1) London N. and N.W. and South
Herts.
<2> London W. and part Middlesex.
(3) London S.W. and part Middlesex
and part Surrey.
(4) Surrey.
Applications are invited from
experienced Representatives and
candidates between 25-40 years of age,
with pharmaceutical or allied scientific
background.- Comprehensive tr ainin g
will be given.
This specialised work is challenging
and interesting, involving discussion •
with the MedicaL Nursing and Dental
professions on the Reckitt & CoLraan
range of pharmaceutical products.
Salary, subject to annual review, is
related to experience and qualifications.
A Company car is provided with
facilities for private use. Other
benefits include profit sharing and
pension schemes and membership
of R.U-PA.
An applications will be treated in cmfir
dencc. Please state any °
not Irish your application to be fonraraea.
PRODUCTION PLANNING
& CONTROL MANAGER
Location— NORWICH
A leading manufacturer of men's outerwear has
a vacancy for an experienced Manager to take
charge of the Production, Planning and Control
function, reporting to the Works Director. The
desired ace is between 25 and 40 and preference
will be given to candidates holding a degree or
equivalent qualification in Production Engineer-
ing or a numerate qualification. Experience in
Production Control, and a knowledge of Work
Study, preferably in the Clothing Industry, is
essential, Salarv will be commensurate with the
position, offering excellent opportunity for
personal advancement, and will not be less than
£2,500 p.a.
Reference 16771 /DT (S. Powell)
j>' k.'A he IW.edln Vr'.cte.'t flHtf'dence and thwldbe
■ ;he ccnsulltmi quanta the rt.rrrenee mane.-r.
Executive Selection Divisfon
OLD COURT HOL’SE- OLD CClifil PLACE ■ W*-* V<B
British Paints * Chemicals
is an acknowledged leader in the manufacture and
marketing of a highly sophisticated range of indus-
trial sealants. Due to expansion and re-organisation
a vacancy exists in the Londou Area.
:T
Applications by telephone (reverse
charge) or in writing should me made
to: Mr. P. A. Watson, Reckitt & Column
Pharmaceutical Division, Dansom Lane,
HnO HUS 7DS- Telephone: 0462 261oL
• • •
The successful applicant
for this post will be iu the
25-40 age group and will
already have successful
telling experience in the
construrtion industry. He
will also be required to call
upon certain marine out-
lets with a specialised
range ot sealant* Id this
market. Although cpecilic
knowledge of sealants
would be useful it is not
essential as full training
will be sJ'-en, A realistic
salary will he negotiated
and there will be scope Tor
lonimued advancement.
Tlir usual fringe benefits
are applicable and a Com-
pany Car is proiided.
Brief detaiLs of career hi«-
turv and present salary
should be addressed to:—
Personnel Department,
British Paints fir Chemicals,
PORTLAND RD„ NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE N22 1BL
FIELD SALES MANAGER
INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS
a tvsiriiidlit nrcs-umme ni »au-.» .nu k*
in w liich held sul*-s super Isiun p!a>s a kef rede fhe
n,^n will have spent seic-raj >ear> widi a high
"piXi.e W. i0ur
uJ.-et i ir- v it**, to —
Xjr C A. C^risnn. N'ati* nal Sales .Maua,.*T.
SLC.K i HiCUMN LID..
2 t While eh a pel iUiad. London. E.L
Liverpool £2,500— £3,000
PERSONNEL
MANAGER
A leading firm in die ship repair industry
wishes to appoint a Manager for its personnel
department. He will be responsible to the
Production Manager for industrial relations,
including negotiations and agreements with.
Trades Unions, for staff recruitment and salary
a dmin istration , and for managing the work of
his staff concerned with training, safety,
catering, and associated activities.
Basic requirements
* Aged about 40, membership of the
Institute of Personnel Management, or
equivalent, would be an advantage
* Experience in personnel management
in shipbuilding, or ship repair, or in
die heavy construction industry.
There is e pension and Ufa assurance scheme.
Brfet bnt coTBjwehenav* of yoar career, which win
bo Erected in strict cenfidMuse but will be passed 10 Our
principals unless we receive specific instructi ons lo the
contrary, should be sem to MD.883.
Executive SaLeetion Division. A.L' Sfr -k'
Cooper Brothers & Co.
Limited, Management
Consultants, Abacus House, ^
Gutter Lane, London, E.C.2.
Chief Engineer—
Microwave Equipment
A major appointment of interest to a senior engineer or
scientist is to be made at Sanders Division of Marconi
Instruments, Stevenage, the self-contained Microwave
Division of Marconi Instruments limited.
The Division designs, ma nufa ct ur es, and markets
microwave instruments and components. The Chief
Engineer will be responsible to the Divisional Manager
for all aspects of the engineering and scientific
functions. The development laboratories and associated
departments employ about 40 people of whom about
half are graduate engineers.
The person appointed will have considerable design
experience at microwave frequencies, particularly on
test gear applications, and will be familiar with the
latest trends of solid state devices at these frequencies. ~
It is important that candidates should have a high
degree of creative ability in the design of test gear that
can be commercially exploited in. its own right.
The successful candidate will be expected to deputise for
the Divisional Manager and play a full part in the
management of the division in all technical and
business aspects. Thus the appointment offers excellent
opportunities for a technical manager to broaden his
experience in both the technological and managerial
fields.
The appointment is a senior one, and carries a salary
and conditions of employment that will be attractive to
able people with appropriate experience.
Please write in confidence to S G Spooner,
Divisional Manager, Marconi Instruments Sanders
Division, Gunnels Wood Road, Stevenage, Herts.
[GEC-Matconi
Electronics:
POWER EQUIPMENT LIMITED, ZAMBIA
Have immediate vacancies for fully skilled Massey
Ferguson and Hyster
Machinery Fitters
THE COMPANY Are main distributors In Zambia for the
above products and are part of a large
and continually expanding International
Group.
THE JOBS Require -fully skilled men with product
knowledge for both workshop and field
duties. Be capable of working on their
own initiative and of training African
staff.
THE REWARDS Pay commencing at £1 *00 per hour,
5 dav 45 hour week. 10% terminal
gratuity on 3 vear contract. Free out-
ward and return passages. Free accom-
modation. Medical aid scheme.
Generous local leave and one of the best
climates in the world.
There Is a preference for bachelors, but outstandingly
experienced married men will be considered.
Write, giving full details of training and experience
to: Box S.692, Lee Gr Nightingale Ltd., Liverpool,
LI 6AZ.
FiRST CUSS REPRESENTATIVE
General Time Limited (Westcloxi, due .to promotion, have
a vacancy for a first class Representative in the area
covering East, Central, North and parts of West London;
parts of Eases, and Hertfordshire. For the above average
Representative- thi* Is an - absorbing and rewarding
position offering good career prospects with a vigorous
and. progressive company selling to the Jewellery'. -Elec-
trical and Hardware trades.
Good 4-figure basic salary and quarterly bonus is offered.
A Company car is provided and expenses paid, along
with a Pension and Life Assurance Scheme, and the
usual fringe benefits.
This is an excellent opportunity for the right man to
join a first-class Company where promotion is made from
within, ensuring that personal effort, integrity and
results are fully rewarded.
Applications are invited from men aged between 25 and
40 years with a minimum ot two years' successful exper-
ience selling to the wholesale and retail trade and who
have written proof of a successful soles record to date.
Applications, In strict confidence, giving full details of
age, present salary, etc. should be addressed bo:
The General Sales Manager,
GENERAL TIME LTD.,
Stralhleves, Dumbarton. Scotland:
Cosmetic
Salesmen
Tbe Gala Group, a fast expanding' international
cosmetics company, are out to reward 3 important
Salesmen. Reward them well in salary, incentive
schemes, benefits, opportunities and jhromotion— the
way only a successful company like ours can afford 1
Mary Quairt & Miners Divisions
You're most likely aged between 25-35 and can
show evidence of a successful career in selling cos-
metics or otheri consumer goods far a well known
company. We want one of you to sell our famous
success prone Mary Quant cosmetics in the SOUTH
WEST OF ENGLAND (based Somerset, Dorset or
Wiltshire} and tbe other to sell Miners cosmetics in
the BIRMINGHAM area. Car provided. These are
ideal opportunities for you to grow with our group
benefiting from our modem techniques and ex-
panding markets.
Mobile Salesman
Our Miners Cosmetics divirion are seeking
someone to wofk from the BIRMINGHAM area.
There he will progress in the company quickly as a
result of his own efforts after a comprehensive
training both inffhe field and in our Group Training
Centre.- Good starting salary, benefits and car. He
should be aged {between 19 and 25, with some ex-
perience of selling fast-moving consumer goods.
If you ore interested m one of these excellent oppor-
tunities please ionite or telephone now for an application
form to:—
Mr. D- Smith,
Gala Cosmetic Group limited,
Surbiton, Surrey.
(TeJ: 01-3975200)
GALA COSMETIC GROUP LIMITED.
Leeds— £3,000+
Regional Manager
This new appointment is with a market leader who Is
creating a dynamic i and thrusxful mid die -management
tsam, to maintain itnNo 1 position.
This is a rare opportunity for a man to establish himself
in a company which will offer job satisfaction, financial
reward and an outstanding long-term future.
Applications are invited from candidates aged 30-40,
who already occupy positions as Area/Regional
Managers in the speciality field.
They should be selfi-motivated, self-reliant innovators
who can lead a top-class sales force by example, initia-
tive and creative seiliog ideas.
Essentially, the successful man will be one who becomes
involved in selling at all levels, a desk-bound manager
will not succeed in disposition.
An excellent salary- a/nd bonus scheme will provide an
income well in excessttri £3,000 pjj. and a quality car
will be provided. Fufllt expenses win be paid and the
position carries big corapany fringe benefits.
As removal expenses 'can ba negotiated, applications
are invited regardless-of present location.
Please write in strict confidence, quoting ref. DS. 0795.
TACK NA SAG EM EXT CDXSBLTWnS.
SOESCt DTVU 01, 171-1 M VAUXHAU.
BBISai ROAD. LDRD0R, S.W.1.
Confidential Reply Service
f Gmr full deimh pfyaurquulificauons, past earctr and
[ present salary. If ihere is etny company to tehichae should not ’
forward your reply, irdorit us accordingly but separately.
CONTRACT ENGINEERS
The prospective cand idates will have had at least J
years experience of handling, at a senior level,
contract co-ordinarictt and contractual negotia-
tions including nrran jjements with sub-contractors.
They must be familiar with the critical detailed
assessment and control of contract conditions and
variations, and have ai thorough knowledge of pre-
contract costing.
It is likely that candidates will have had an
engineering background and be educated to degree
standard, but other applicants will be considered.
. Salarv negoriabio. F.xrrlimt a mrfe-ing rrendir-
, ions and benefits.
TV-:-,:
Streets*-
Streets Advertising Ltd-. \
Vacancy Code No. W.l/2, 1
57-til Mortimer Street, j
London. W.l. y
-1
vrfjA *jt •Cftc.JitaKt&t i i « i ... ? .*j.',2KSflWt .?»• : '( A* 3* A*.” - \ *,• « •
-.-.24 The Daily Telegraph. F riday. JulB -*>
Rugby Union
LIONS RESHUFFLE
PACK BEFORE
INTERNATIONAL
I
By JOHN REASON in Auckland
T HE British Lions intended .to choose their
recast international pack for the match
'against the powerful Aucklandjteam tomorrow, .
ibut have had to make a changfe becouse of the
"shoulder injury to Bill McBride. Geoff Evans
replaces him at lock.
This means that only three forwards survive from
: the pack which lost to New Zealand in the second
international at Christchurch. The^ are John Pullin,
Ian McLauchlan- and | brcait L record of 17 on
' -Mervyn Davies. oF New Zealand established i
GP 14 World. Championship Yachting
Rebellion moves up
-U-
from the also-rans
By FK4.NK CHAPMAN at Thorne Bay
rpHE G P 14 world championships at Thorpe Bay yielded
A a surprise winner in the fourth points race yesterday.
Paul Johnson and Robert Sanderson in Rebellion leading
home the 56-strong fleet
after modest 15th f J4th and /* . _ »
20th places in previous Uc <’" n Kff ring
races.
Johnson sailed an immaculate RECORD 120
race making an early start-from
tbe gate so that he could go in- rmniT
shore where the tide was f UK T ll 1 1 H
weaker.
His eventual 2min 14sec win CAT D A I?
over Martin Jolleys in. Electra OVrjUjlrlA A KA i jVj
Finn Championship | Archery
OVERALL
T
^ T NE
I break JLhe record oF 17 on a tour
oF New Zealand established by
Tony (D’ReiJly.
« ’ Those admitted, apart from. j n I the meantime, however,
.McBride, are Sean. Lynch, Bevaa has scored only once' and
' Dclxne Thomas, Peter Dixon as he -is still at that stage when
--and John Taylor They are EJHKJJ
. replaced by M-ixe Roberts, naturally discouraged. He realises
Gordon Brown, Fergus he has almost, no chance now oF
• Slattery and Rodger Arneil. breaking O'Reilly’s record.
_ pullin', nght eye still looks a '"“ft"/,, ££
fearful mess after the P uneb he receafc iy This is a pity because be
took against Hawkes Bay, but h as su , c £ a ] 0 £ to give.
Jefaysthathe can see weU Thcfe ^ a at>licejtWe ]oweriDli
. .enough to play. c f pressure when the Lions
>. McLauchlan leads pack *ffiT
The pack will now be led by hazard. The problem facing Car-
McLau chian. He has a calm ap- wyn iJames U lo deal with a
preciation oF the technical aspects match as difficult as the one
of forward play and it will, be against Auckland and yet to build
interesting to see if he has a sinu- the team up to a peak for the
lar mastery of strategy. international the following week, i
Jf he has. he may well rival He jhas decided to do it on the
McBride for the leadership of the principle oF sparing the whip at
pack in the third international this sftage. The team will not train
— next week. today!
The continued selection of Mike 1 T rt _ a _
•Roberts at tight head indicates | James adamant
.■that the Lions are prepared to Caryvyn Jones reiterated ves-
■accept a passive scrummager .hi terday that John Dawes was right
.. exchange for a greater capacity wh en;he said that the try scored -
- at the front- of the lme-ouL If by Poverty Bay and East Coast
. only .Roberts could bring to h.s 0 „ Wednesday should not have
. Pty m the loose the same urgen^r been . allowed following a quick
and pointedness he shows in thrown after the ball had been
suc-a-s’de soccer the Lions would ntV rmd from the crowd.
... ... Doug Smith, the Lions man-
His performance against Auck- aeer. said that- he would mention
land will establish whether the &e episode in his official report
Lions can take the risk of play- Th _■ manarf « r added that h*
fer^Sn?* fn,,,E r ° W aeaJDSt w5B recommend that for 1 future
XNew Zealand. tours ' curtain-raisers should not
Mike Gibson will also miss to- be played before the main game
morrow’s match. The management if tliz pitch was wet or soft
do not want him to risk aggravat- “Thei’ make tbe surface much
ing his hamstring injury. John worse than it need be," he said.
SpCOCer will take hlS place and Auckland: R. Wbetman: R. WiJ-
will thus have his first Saturday w«nw. I K. carri^iinn. D. poimcr. c..
.. ma r_ r ™„L-C Wcmberg: P. Murdoch. D. Mciatyrr:
game tor eignt weeks. B R . urtMi. g. D«oiu»hn.
A. Edwards. P. WKlIIng, J. Snerlock.
Bevan discouraged K - w ^S m tL^Tt!‘ £
: David Duckham retains his J; %- m j R sp^ , „T“’ D f- 1' d 55K.£T ,i £
position on tbe left wing. John John. |o. o. Edward: m. g. Roberts.
. Bevan has been having treatment ^“"c. J e v.^T^E' 1
for a septic foot and one way and r. j. Amen. t. m. Davies. Sobst.:
.another he seems to have lost his J- Le » ,5 - T H'5pki , u. p. a. L-
way on the tour. ^""T’ d. l. Qom-Hi.
■- Carwyn James is very’ conscious ,, , ,
of this and of the discouragement YACHTING
which such a young player as schools firrflyjh -ship
Bevan. obviously feels. The diffi- bTSm &£puH:
culty is that he may go another * ,5,- &irord-Srniih» iz’i. 2: st
10 days without a match.
A month ago Bevan had scored '19V. ^i Bkndrir- iR A wiiiiani.
11 tries and seemed certain to ae£> 25V. |C 6. M ' 3 ’ ao,n,u " *
J. S.! Spencar. D,
Du:Mnin: R.
R. J-l AnifH. T. M. Davies. Sobst.:
A. J.\ Lewis. R. Hopkiiu. F. A. L.
Laidtasv. D. L. QuianrU.
! YACHTING
VLTCLIC SCHOOLS FIREFLY CH’SHIP
ritohenar). — Final: Grcsbam's iD. & R
Bridge? S^pls. 1: Seveooaks i H. Macart-
a cy ,. A .S, 1 I r Qrd -Smith! lZ’j 2: St
Paul's’ fW. Henderson A J. Arm I tape j
la. 3r Stowe iR. H. Sleaveoson * A. R.
Prarwi '19»a. 4: Blundell's iR. A. william-
Min A A. H Dick) 33, 5: Sollhnll ,N. A
S. AEko) 25»«. 6-
Roberts V . . a gamble in
the front row.
Badminton
DOUBLES ARE
ENGLAJXD’S
CHIEF HOPE
By GEOFFREY HARROWER
AN intriguing match be-
tween teams represent-
ing England and Europe
has been arranged for
Aug. 26 as part of the
World Sportacular at Earls
Court.
Europe seem overwhelmingly
strong with four current Euro-
pean champions and three all-
England title holders
In the singles England’s Derek
Talbot. Raymond Stevens, and
Margaret Bede will do extremely
well to score against Elo Hansen.
Sture Johnsson and Eva Twed-
berg. respectively.
It is to the doub1es-~tlKtt -Eng-
land must look for successes.
Gillian Gilks and Judy Ashman
must certainly be favourites to
overcose Ulla Strand and Joke
van Beusekom.
ENGLAND, — J. D. E«dr rsiafh). R.
■P. Sli-rew CE-WI-XI. B- C. Stnrt iXortfl-
umtorrland). D. Talbot INorttiombcrlandi.
Mh» V. Beck iMUMlMex), Mrs M. A.
Gfflt* iSurreyi, Mr G. C. K. Admin
I
EUROPE- — W. Rochosv IW. G «•
■mibi E. Huqrn i DrnoiH-vi, g. Jofaon-
•m (Sweden). 8. Frl ‘Denmark). F.
Wnl*oe ‘OemnArk). M. U. Stmad iDrn-
niarfvi. Mm E. TwrdlH-rg i Sweden). Mtv
J. van Beusekom (‘Holland).
Sailing Canoes
DICEY MAKES
T OHN ’ BIDDLE brought
rJ Dicey to .victory in the
fifth Quincey Cup points race
at Hayling Island yesterday
and with one more race to be
sailed is in an unassailable
position for the Cup and the .
British National Championship
Shrike HI, with Alan Emus, the
world champion in canoe sailing
at tbe helm, was first to turn the
weather mark followed by Dicey
and Monomania (A. Miles).
Johnson sailed an immaculate
race making an early start-from
tbe gale so that he could go in-
shore where the tide was
weaker.
His eventual 2min I4sec win
over Martin Jolleys in Electra
showed the extent oF his exper-
tise.
Local helmsman Bay Davies in
Perdido initially guided the way,
tacking round moored' boats, in-
shore and striking out for the
weather buoy at the appropriate
moment. Johnson followed him
to the mark ahead oF John
McWilliam in Trostan, Bob
Gregory in Black Magic and Eric
Driver in Zest. '
Read challenges
Lancastrians Martin Jolleys and
Andrew Bead (Dreuid) were next
round and it was Read’s task,
with his other overall challengers
Peter Currie, David Owen and
Peter Duffy well back, to close
with McWilliam, his main title
rivaL
Approaching the gybe mark
second time round on- a course
of three triangles and a beat
McWilliam was fifth and Read
just astern and they held these
positions until Bead went in front
on the third beat. '
Breeze strengthened
.The South Easterly grew from
a whisper to a decent sailing
breeze for the first time this
week at this stage, during which
McWilliam again managed to take
his rival, DUt attempting to
I break clear on -the last beat
1 McWilliam lost out.
Eric -Driver split the two at
the end, but -Bead -bad- the im-
portant fourth to McWiUiaru's
sixth.
Counting discards, Reed starts
today’s races one point better
off than Peter Cume in We’re
Here, who chose the wrong first-
beat route and finished 27th.
Jdi FTS RACE RHielliM iP. John-
v>n. Midland S.C.I. I: LlMtra iV .
.Tolley*. Lnwtonl. 2: Shell Magic (ft.
Gregory. Lac-on-solcnti. 3: Drculrt (A.
Read. Weal L«fic«). A: Zett if.. Driver.
Rwiworthl. 5: Trot-tca cl. McWilliam,
R. Cork). 6.
EXTRA SURE
Dicey gained the lead on a wind
shift in the second round and
maintained her position to get
the winning gun bv just over a
minute. in tbe afternoon the
breeze freshened to Force 3 and
Dicey gained another victory to
win the Murphy Howard Cup. '
QUINCEY CUP- — SUi Race: Dicvy -
(J. A. BldcUe. Haylinq NUndi. ]: SSrike
III (A H. Empa. R. Cnn lutoii 2:
Monomania ia. Mile*. Stoncl. 3: P tr-
rlrrta (A. atchpala. Hayling lalnadi, 4.
MURPHY HOWARD UP Dicey. 1:
Monomania 3: I cam. ,p. c. Biddle). 3:
Skat I! (Dr N. Southward). 4.
By TONY FAIRCHILD
''THERE is a record entry
■ of 120 yachts for tomor-
row’s fifth heat in the 11-
race Solent Points cham-
pionship, with the start and
finish at the Royal Yacht
Squadron line at Cowes.
The race for their Queen
Victoria Cup is bein£ run by
the Household Division YC, one
of the 12 clubs whose races
make up the Solent series.
Practically all the class leaders
in the series are competing, in-
cluding two of Britain's Admiral's
Cup team— Cervantes JV iR. C
Watson) and Prospect oF Whitby
(A. Slater), 1st and 3rd in Class
AL
' Arctic skua’s task
Arctic Skua 'M. Richardson),
with a lower rating, will be try-
ing to catrh Windsprite of
Hamble IB. Banks) which lead*
her by 4-« points jn Class A3,
while Sardonyx IV (A. G. Fou-
card) and Sharcen (S. J. Coles i.
level on 29 points at the top of
Class B1 should break their tie.
IE-!D£R.S.— Cl*vi 41: ronnin IV
iR. C. Wu<ori IQO l ;i>i'. 1: Winuimr -
(D. O. May) 37»«. 2: Prrxi vrt Wh»h' ,
(A. 'Slatm BS'a- 3. A2-. GnnBw •« ■
-Hamhlr- CR TS*,. 1: Roiind^hr.nl
I R . T?i IrJbvj 5ft j: rlorlrr V i) ft'ln-ii
3. A3; Wivd.prlio «( Hamhlr-
■ B. Bank"' 52. 1. Arctic 5t.ua ■>(
RlrtiardAtn) 4 7 lj. 2: Gnllino.H , It
• 6"flcr>-Coopcr) 46*4. 3. A5: Trrn ill.
Pirt-Pittsi 43’*.
M : Snronvx IV it. G. Fmic^nli.
Sharpen (S. j. Coin nqiial 1 R2:
Fidrlla IF. f. Wr-lrhi 50 3 « 1 : Vtanln.
oaln (W. \f. Hurl«in A Capt \V. tL
Watts i 35**. 2.
Only about half a dozen foreign
Admiral's Cup boats are compet-
ing in the Household Division
event, but the Australian, South
African, Argentine and Brazilian
teams are entered with several
other overseas yachts for a race
around tbe Snlent buoys from
Cowes on Sunday.
The race, orcanrsed by the
Royal Thames YC. is for another
Queen Victoria Cup.
Foreign entries have also
swollen the fleet for the fi05-mile
Fast-net race, climax of the inter-
national offshore series, to a
record 236 boats. The race starts
from Cowes on Aug. 7.
COOK TROW.— Flml race — Cowm-
Dfainrd— Overall: C»rlcr (J. Adoluvl
140 r 4Bmlo 36Vc. f: Store Khan ij.
Roll * D. Poctrn 15-23-12. 3: Wildftrr
it- Camerom 15-S8-12. 3. d*w« 5
A «: Shere-Khm. 1: Sheba iR. S.
15-48-0. 2; PT*>idem »J. C.
Marten IMI-W. 3. Cl:«ee- 7 A «:
Caprice. 1: Wildfire. 2; GeoiOlmo iM.
■ An(len.oni 1S-&0-0. 3.
Tearn Overall: Britain iStierr-Khan.
C.nronlmn A She - * Shn loapls. 1:
France iReve De Mrr. Omaha. Alqle
Hleaci 140. 2: \,iHtralr<i iCaprier.
I.nnielOD Lady. 5»- fl riy Spirit* 93.6.
Bv GINA HUNT
* at Torquay
TVITH one rare remaining
1 ’ in the Finn national
championship, let in .Alac-
donald-Smith in Cara mb a
retained his title by winning
the fifth points rare, for
the Roval Torquay Trophy,
at Torquay \ ester day.
The earlv leader. Bill ITmidnr.
in -\N, Chri^ Law. sailmS
Tequila, and Macdanald-Smiin
were more than a minute ahead
of the rc^t nF the fleet at ihe
weather m-irk.
On the b:-".id reach Law. ia
□arrowed ih f> sap between
Tcfjtiila ami \ N T and. rounn.ni
Ihe mark fur the serond beat.
on lv 13 «ec separated them.
Hnddei slipped t»* serond pl.i.-c |
aFter failing m rmer. and Law
started the final lap m the IrJd.
Fur the third time this week
Marfinna Id-Smith was in thiid
place for the last he;d. and omj?
again this talented sailor^ r.ii’i*
taliped on his opponents' m:s-
takes.
Half-minute lead
Law and Hi wider, further in-
shore. were busy covering
each other that the white-bulled
Caramha was able to make its
wav to the finishing lino v ith
clear wind and half-a-minute
lead.
Alan Johnson won the Dun hill
Finnfinder series bv recording
his fourth «in of t hr week, and
with a second plait, he has no
need to i .(«'».* in the final sail-off.
HO* M. TOROl' M TROPH1 .
i ,|. M«.4nin.ii>«nllli l». Iirnori
I; T”iuil* -i. . Lew. lainrvl-i. 2. N N
■ '.1 Mi. I.lrr .V Shur'.-n lA.
< Ilf 1 I‘r,.h4n|!. 4. S>W»ll.<rI ■ 1 .
Turner. F'IhimoI S.t'.t j; fii"'na iR.
I'hv- aH K *. *> M. «.
O.rivll lallar al^carri>. Omiii'iJ 0i>-'.
1. >IMn.„ ••» • T. C. V N Oi
ir<iu.;.v .r i ■ gfi 4. eiilr <R.
Hi* ■ 50 3. carail,,,-., ■ L* . HnwlrUi
40 6.
Srhnaht Yachting
TITLE FOR PAUL
WEEDON, 13
r>y DAVID THORPE
at Portsmouth
Paul Weedon, lo. crewed by
his siifter Jill. 10, won Ihe Mirror
class racing in Ihe National
School Sailing Association
regatta which ended yesterday
at Portsmouth.
Although the young Weedon
pair hit the mud and their lowest
*r.n-e with a sixth place in yes-
terday's finale, their three firsts
and a second in the previous four
races had already ensured their
victory over 45 competitors aged
up to 19.
A total of 267 boats from 200
schools raced in the four-day
event, efficiently organised by the
NSSA. They were aided by the
services, who provided RAF
rescue helirnpters. and bv local
sailing clubs and Portsmouth
Corporation. Final details:
F.nterpri«c r ft . FHI * G. I<*n«|| |\'or-
» icti*. Ovdrt : K . BIUi.,ra A P. Brown
■ Hrrt-i. Slow h’cap : I. H.ilnns A N.
Crawlurd IHmIM. Mirror: I'. A J.
WTOnn iS.-.iiUicnd). GP14: J. Di. k * J
H. Praiwio iffo-lfti. P.i«r h'cap: A. i
J.*hn-rrn A A. GH*~r.n lOir^hlmi. Torch:
j. Mnore * N. Hnlinr* (S<inlhanip|nni.
British squad wel} [
]h
prepared to meet
world best
By KOY STANDRING
T HE first of the 54 nations who compete in next week :
world target archery championships are alreac .
installed in York, and by Sunday there will be th
greatest influx of archers . . . . . ■.
4 ,^. 0 :::
i 5»A
into the city possibly since
Marston Moor.
Britain, ever the retiring -g? , '
hosts, officially bring their r-‘
team together at the weekend, Ip ■ t
and there are two days of . . '"-'IfHK,
practice on Knavesmire before :
shooting starts in earnest on
Although special coaching will HUlk
continue until next year’s ■ «hH|
Olympic Games in. Munich, the gaffijjfljjft
world championships are the a;
culminatiOQ of almost two MkBIKlJIM fr ■ /
years’ intensive preparation by UBmESSm ^
The most concrete development / a
—and. some would say. the most H WSm t ./ j
ronlroversial — has been the for-
maiion of an oijTnpic tr aini ng Lynne Thomas, an out-
T1h, 0 dMn*!?,d 0 ™ro?c“ t dfr landing prospect for
maoded by the squad coaches In Britain, 'and (below), .
S*'viBr Jl,? rt £S?nS". d . *BS P ™ ]i r Ccfwards, runner-
out of it. .up in the European
View on coaching championships in 196S.
It is argued by Barabara Shriek- In-
land (Wakefieldi and Richard f I.
Hemming (Lucas. Birmingham) /.
that coaming should be a personal • ' *.
affair once basic ability has been
pi oved, and Hemming has spent
Ihe past week under the watchful
eve of the national _ coaching
orcamser, Don Gould, in DorseL - '*'■
These hvo are new to inter- / .
national competition, but by their v - *,,
pc forma decs since the turn of the y-- v . ■
war land Hemming at 18 b as f
licrome national champion) have
earned selection when the weight '■ % -
of official opinion might have been .? -■
against them. \* "
Of the squad .members, un- % ' *
rt.urbtedlv the most accomplished
are Roy Matthews and Ted
Gamble both of Lhe Leamington £(.•'••••' .7 T. .
club, and Lvnne Thomas (St
David’s). Matthews holds the ■. ■ : v
British FTTA Round record of _ —
1.216. and Miss Thomas the „„
women’s at 1^11 Two such OTHER SPORT TODAY
g"* AY'S? ^ ATHLETICS. — AAA OC.hips ,Cr»„al
IO win at rorh. Palace. 5 p.«n.).
BOWLS: — Nllddx B A dnublo four*
Mncf fparpd wmI-BimI iKvcIhi* bc. Mmtow \lsw M.
mUM 1 CdlCU H»nls fourt.. lrlqlr>*. pairs finnH iSantb-
Matthews, a factory manager croquet. — urea ch'»tiip . iHurtias-
Lynne Thomas, an out-
standing prospect for
Britain, and (below), .■
Pauline Edwards, runner- ■
up in ' the European
championships in 196S.
-
to win Tt York ATHLETICS. — AM cn snipe (ir>*iai
to win at rorh. Pahce. a p.«n.>.
BOWLS: — Middx B A double fours
Mnvt fparpil vniMinil iKvdii. BC. hmtow VIiw y.
mUM 1 CdlCU Hanls four), pairs finiib iSontb-
. Matthews, a factory manager croq"uet. — urea chMiip ‘ iHurtios-
m Coventry, is articalate, ex- hum.
perienced and probably the most w golf. — E nnir«h Am-y cnMiip iBura-
r _,_„ j -U n.iL- l h4*n * httovvi. Sc-'IKsh sitifti ch ship
reared ot an tne British team. s t Aniirewsi. WoLsh amat cb'shipa
Gamble, a Leicestershire roofing is*n««hariuicwn(. vviih* women tnt’nu
contractor, is a born fighter and t '”?*?5-*? ,v ?Z!£?. , i! >> ’ >■ •_ Rhlrld n0 ,_
equally a boro extrovert: the iLeVcvlieri. ^iiier-c^Hei. . Men? lwn
pair are complementary to each p™- S J&- ^SS:
oc ?;. _ . , Womrn ; Earibunroe. Cromer. Fcll'otmve,
Miss Thomas is a bank clerk wejfiridoc. Frinton. Aivcwwke. chehco-
in Cardiff, and arguably the most h "™- _ WA v shh* L«e niv i-
consistent scorer in Western HackS.^ 0 ^ Vxfor »» norl v Olid-
Europe. Her challenge will come , 'V al i w *22^!£ ,, „ v r £S ,c *V£r
from the. formld^>le Polish ft: ,»SS5?*, C lFortJSi
women, the Russians, the United i»u v u-rfijuriw it. Sin.
States, and possibly Pauline Ed-
wards (Swan, Kent), a matbc- rt v •ra-NKrtc:
mabcian who finished second in TABLE TENNIS
the European championships in 5 . T ?^,nd M V.
DIOO- F.naMnil n.
TABLE TENNIS
TOUR M M CH Austral!*
■>. Kn-il.ind 1. Overall: Australia 5.
F.ngMad O-
18-21
Abbey- National Is. a household name in
the field of savings and home ownership.
However, this long’ standing [record of
achievement does not prevent .senior
management from_ recognising fjhaf young
men are capable of taking ~on ^responsible
management positions in their twenties.
Opportunities !
It is our policy to train our owjn staff and
to promote from within. There -ara a wide
variety of different fields open *to a young
man who wants to make a career with us
and further details, will .be sept to every
applicant. . ■
Location J •
We are expanding our forganisation
throughout the U.K. but this advertisement
is concerned with openings in Hoe GREATER
LONDON AREA; I ■
Qualifications 1
Minimum requirements are 6.’ G.C.E. * O ’
levels including Maths and English. How-
ever, if is likely that successful candidates
will either have passed 2 'A' levels or have
taken some other form of Furth-er Education
such as an H.N.D. in BUSINESS STUDIES.
Salary
The STARTING salary will ' be between
£800 and £1,250 according to .'age, qualifi-
cations. experience and location.
Applicants who are definitely interested
in these opportunities should write with full
personal details stating their preference for
Interview times and dates. Alternatively,
potential candidates may request further
information without any obligation.
i
Please write or telephone, j
Hr. A. C. Milhofer, Personnel Officer,
Abbey National Building Society,
Abbey House, Baker Street,
London, NALL OMU 5555.
Senior Electrical Engineer
Senior Heating, Ventilating
& Air Conditioning Engineer
Applications are invited from engineers who are Members of the appropriate
Institution, for the above two posts on the permanent staff of a leading Consulting
Engineering practice in Epsom.-
Applicants should have considerable experience in the design and specification
of services for industrial, commercial and public buildings. They will be required
to participate in the Client's brief and to co-ordinate his requirements; to manage
multi service design activities, and to supervise the work of specialist
sub-contractors.
If you like working on laige, varied and interesting projects in stimulating working
conditions, please write, giving your age, qualifications and experience to;
Mr. R. E. Williams.
W. S. ATKINS & PARTNERS
Consulting Engineers
Woodcote Grove, Ashley Road. Epsom, Surrey.
i
3
k CAREER IK
MEDICAL REPRESENTATION
This major internjrtionai ph.irmar nutical house has vacancies for men and
women aged 22.33 as Medical Representatives in various parts of the
United Kingdom including :
East London
South Hampshire
West Hertfordshire
Leicestershire
North/East
Lancashire
ACCOUNTANT
CONTROLLER
rraulred f or bulldioa »>..
Romford »r«a. kaowlfOfl 1 * «
tr*df an advantaon tnu not
cue n lid). Monthly
qoutp riy and doaunl aCCOonM.
Frit,;<in u'tteme. Salary nego>
rl^blr. WrHc wid» details to
A.C. 1T990, Daft? Telegraph.
E.C.*.
DISPLAYED
appointments
al>o appear today
Page 10
COMMERCIAL
jMANACER
Thi/s Important position
wioh a well-known manu-
fad.urer of ELfiCTBI*
CAV.RE and associated
equipment will appeal to
an I energetic man having
good existing connections
witihln tbe ELECTRICAL
HEATING Industry. The
work Is exacting and
ne^ds both ability and
df^li<.ation. The position
ta.iries on aMJropriale
with cw and out-
sMndiBg possibilities for a
first-class man. Applkonis
mdy write in confidence
gluing full particulars to:
Atfinley * Co.. Chartered
Aciounrnnts
Charle.- Street. Bfrming-
hajn, B3 SLY.
CHIEF
ACCOUNTANT
£3,000 +
This vacancy calls for a qualified accountant
(A.C.A., A.C.C.A. or A.CWAI, aged 27-40.
with practical industrial accounting experience.
Responsibility will be to the Commercial Director
for the total accounting function of the company’s
standard costing management control system, group
financial accounting, debtor control, production of
forecasts and budgets, management accounting
information to tight schedules, and will cover the
effective control ot an accounrs team of *40.
Knowledge of computer applications an advantage.
Emphasis will be on management control informa-
tion and its interpretation to Divisional Managers.
Initial salary negotiable at £3.000+ with con-
tributory pension, free life insurance, and assist-
ance with removal expenses as necessary.
Applications to: Edgar Oldham, Personnel Director,
OLDHAM & SON . LTD., Denton, Manchester.
Tel: 061-336 2431.
O LDHAM
BATTER 1 E S
A nrembor of ihe Oldham International Group of Companies
SALES ENGINEER
Tool & Hoist’ Division
Ingersad-Rand, world- leading manufacturers of compressed
air equipment, require a Sales Engineer to operate m . , .
. THE MIDLANDS
The appointed man. who must be a first-class sales engin-
eer, wifi be responsible for selling the Company’s pneumatic
tool and hoist range to every type ot industry. He should
be living in the area.
Applications are invited from ambitious men aoed between
26 and 33, possessing ONC minimum. Proven selling experi-
ence with an engineering background will be looked for. An
attractive salary will be accompanied by or her benefits,
including a Company car. expense account and a pension
sehema.
Please writs, giving full career details and indicating cur-
rent Hilary toi —
Mr. G- H. Normfi. Personnel Manager,
lngcraoll-Rand Company Ltd.
ItS Queen Victoria Street,
London EC4V 4EA.
mOTINTO-ZlNC CORPORATION
Personnel and
Training Officer
RTZ Pillar Limited have 5 Independent companies in the
Cheltenham area with a combined labour force of about
500 engaged primarily in the production and marketing
of extruded, pressed, or formed aluminium products.
We wish to appoint a man to provide a comprehensive
personnel and (raining service to these companies.
Initially the emphasis will be on effective training (at
operative end supervisory level) bui wifi rapidly en-
compass ell other personnel aspects.
The man, probably In his mid- thirties, must have had at
tens 5 years* practical personnel and training experience
gained primarily in a light engineering or manufacturing
environment.
This is a new position which offer* ample scope to a
practical and creative man lo make a significant con-
tribution to ihe companies' profitability.
The salary will inierest a man current ly earning about
£2.000 p.a. Assistance with removal expenses will be
given.
Please write giving full details of age, qualifica-
tions. experience and present salary to: R. W. F.
Penny. (DT). Group Personnel Manager, RTZ
Pillar Limited. Cleveland House. 19 St. James's
Square, London S.W.1.
If you have these qualities, voti could make a good Representative: a dear,
alert mind; a genuine interest in medicine, biology or chemistry; an ability
to absorb and communicatr- technical information to doctors, so that it is
remembered. These are the prime requirements. Other requirements are
a degree, or e(]invulcnL in a scientific subject, or even ai *A’ level In
chemistry or biology, backed by the right kind of experience:
Roche offers Moilir.il Representatives a stimulating and challenging career
j- i2° n i r,a - 5,ope ‘ nr | , « , raonal initiative. Starting salaries recognise’
individual evpcricni e and ability; lull expenses aie paid: there is an excep-
tional contributory pension «• heme and our new fleet car hire scheme
provides you with an excellent car with business and private use.
For further details and an applied t ion form write to Mr. B, R. Chevne.
Sales Personnel Officer, quoting reference LR/DT at:
ROCHE PRODUCTS LIMITED
15 MANCHESTER SQUARE LONDON WIM SAP
33
jm
wm
SALES
OPPORTUNITIES
IN A
PROGRESSIVE
P
George NJ. Whiley Is trie
U.K.'s largest manufacturer
in its . field. Two outstanding
opportunities are now avail-
able ;
PRODUCT MANAGER — To
promote a range of products
for industrial outlets in the
decora live/ design and display
fields. Outsjde sales and sales
administration experience es-
sential. A career opportunity
with excellent salary. Com-
pany car and good fringe
benefits. Based at our Head
Office. Ruislip.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE—
To join our existing success-
ful sales team and cover
5.W. England. Experience in
selling industrial consum-
able products to the print-
ing. bookbinding and plas-
tics industries preferred but
not essential. Excellent
salary- plus incentive bonus.
Company car and coed
fringe benefits. Based Bris-
tol/Bath area.
Please write giving all
relevant details to : •
U-Eu Sales Manager.
GEORGE M. WHILEY LTD.,
Victoria Road. Ruisflp.
Middlesex, HA4 . OLG.
MANAGER
Following the final stages of management
restructuring and plant modernisation, the need
has arisen for a Rolling Mill Manager. He will be
responsible for the profitable operation of a two-
stand, two- high, pre-stressed mill engaged in
re-rolling mild, alloy and special carbon steel
plate, up to 5 ft. wide. The successful applicant
will have experience in handling the above
product range from raw materials through to
! customer delivery. His practical knowledge will
! also include experience of safe working practices
-and Trade Union negotiations applicable to
j Rolling Mills.
; Write, or telephone, in slrirt c.»n/jrfr»lcr fn r more details
j application form lo: Mr D. Wilkin. Comuanu
Snrrelaru. J
'REDHEUGH IRON 8 it STEEL CO. LTD.,
; Teems. Gareshead NE8 2RD. Co. Durham. Tel: 0632 604245 !
THE GROCERY TRADE
Resident in the following areas:
1. MAIDSTONE/KENT 2. BOURNEMOUTH
AND EXPERIENCED
CATERING SALESMEN
BRISTOL AREA
Looking for:
A. lammed Responsibility
B. Mdidlnnetim
C. Increased PremotiuBl
Opportunities
D. A Rm H it jc Salary
P. Growth Company
fi. Fxll Range of Products
H. CatnprehensTO Treisiag
and DcYclopnreet Pragraaaa
L H»dtm Bartering.
RTZ Pillar
RAVENSEFT PROPERTIES LIMITED
Senior Service Charge Accountant
required in West End office of this large expand-
ing property company. Preference will be given
to persons with experience in this field.
Salary about £2,500, with pension and BUPA
scheme, also L.Vs.
Apply Secretary, Avenfield House,
118/727 Park Lane. W.l.
SENSOR TAXATION CONSULTANT
SINGAPORE £10,000
Turquand. Youngs &. Cn. require a Senior
Taxation Consultanl tor their Singapore Office.
The successful candidate will lw* required tn "ivr
professional advice and guidance In Partners
and clients on all aspects ot i.r.uion work and
to assist jn rtaff training and ihe management
oF ihe Tax Department.
This is a senior appoinlmcnt and should suit a
senior Inspector of Ta\os or a niialif„-ri
Accountant with lhe requisite pr.pcrirnce.
EdinbS. ““ bC arranscd in
Please apply lo: —
The Staff Manager,
T1.1KQI1AND. YOiiNlK ft fO.
4. Coleman Street, LONDON. Erjfc" 5^55
E c™ „r., 7 *• ■■rterine. .
, ’ C *" pan T Car - E*Ii*sw. «= OrioDiaud Complny
n you are ambitious, then write in the first instance for full
details quoting "position and area" to:
SALESTRAINING MANAGER,
A. WANDER LTD.. RINGS LANGLEY; HERTS.
Applications are invited from men who have
recent e 5Kmat in g experience 7 ? W
work p!" and Sen . eral pi P e maintenance
’f«L, r n ' nt s ‘ h,at,on - Good salary,
^ company car, snperan-
diion and Lfe assurance scheme.
Apply in writing, giving fun particnJars of
previous experience to:
extracts Manager
A. E- Bartholomew & Co. Ltd^
Penn Place, Rickmansworth, Herts.
Royal International Horse Show
*/ J Vi
"k
By HOTSPUR (Peter Scott)
WN REVIEW, a Royal Ascot winner on
heavy ground last month, should not be
t by much firmer going when he tackles
iyperian Stakes there today. I fancy this
•stent colt will win again.
Iis Windsor Castle Stakes victory at the royal
lg rT® S f, gamst a fieid which included Muion and
t Tins March Past colt also won his first race and
:>grace was attached to
O defeats. Astoria y ,b - Winter Fair’s Old
ti Review lost by only- a recommendation. ior the landria^
to the highly-rated hdin Stakes. °
de berry at Kempton Brydion is &□ improved horse
ind then faced the task ra . n wil £ «-edit
l«tUog 71b to Sfcilvi at U
ar Keu mg last Saturday and 1 fancy
could not have been wI?Uvl w s ° r A the ™lis CasteUa
ad to trouble that remark- n e .
lily on such terms but *? a i2* r vran s «nt-
MoX USef A CDJtS “2
Monkey and Avancer For with a length to spareT He
P |ace - started at 38 to 10 and yesterday's
•afternoon Dawn Review success was his 23rd in England
on cede weight to his five 3™ France. Morris Dancer's
its. They Include Blue earnings of almost
Vender, Fayez and Sharpen ar . e a record for an
• are all winners well above English- trained fiat race gelding.
Double for Olive
with scorching
round on Sweep
The DaUa Telegraph,
Friday, July 25, 1971
East of England Show
ONE, TWO
... '
mm
m-^m ? a m
§ -‘w
By ALAN SMITH
A LAN OUVEH polled off the first double in the
Wembley half of the Royal International Horse
Show at the Empire Poo! yesterday when he scorched
round with Sweep to win .
Biskrah (Jimmy Lindley), making the running in
yesterday’s Foxwarren Handicap at Sandown Park.
The four-year-old went on to win by two and a
half lengths from Torbellmo.
the Country Life and
Riding Cup.
Having won on the opening
day with Pitz Palo, Oliver is
currently leading rider of the
show with two horses. Gert
Wiltfang leads the single-
horse category.
The Co entry Life is a speed
event, over combination fences
fin i s hi n g with a quadruple of
uprights,- -and Oliver, who spent
much oF yesterday at a meeting
of the international affairs com-
mittee, found it just to his
liking.
l ll|lf§
By FINDLAY DAVIDSON
TIT ALCOLM PYRAH tri-
,iT *' umohed in the Bine
Circle Stakes, the show
chain plonship of the East of
England show, taking both
first and second places with
Halloween and Lucky
' Strike at Peterborough yes-
terday.
After jest 15 bad jamped a
dear of Incurred three faults in
a qualifying rotari. it was
decided to take, in addition, au
those with four faults Into the
main ring.
Four went dear to go again
with the clock as arbiter. Fyrah,
going first with Halloween,
splashed in die water and also
nit the wall and Fred Welch, Who
won the earlier “Have « gamble ”
with Baronesse n, ran up .12
faults on Master Larry.
r . . Arthur’s mission
i?“- Ser * .u There has now been an English- By MARLBOROUGH
hocco may require further trained winner in France for each {John Lawrence)
« furlongs but Leicester of the past five days. And Lady ^ A ' 1 STEWARDS: Mr B. Stanley, Mr J. Hambro, Sir W. Dacdale, Mr T.
ii da °R er °y^. ^ith his Rosebery’s much-improved Four- SI AILING irresistibly to- Egerton. Mr J. Baiflie. Mr B Jenks Mr M. Aj-onf* re-
allowance. This colt was year-old Arthur may land a haul ° wards a ninth cham- ^ ^ ** “■ Anto “ fifc
’ 1 - - ■ pionship, Lester Pi^eott i s sla» T« m left, tMssg » son ’s form figures in bbtk
TODAY'S ASCOT SELECTIONS ?nde hjs* 100 th yJA? ‘‘■"StlEaifta SSHP>*
J2S™* . 2.30^s^rtL COEK ' 2JW-SO IS^ 1 p art yesterday 8 “ °"“ aayw coins: good to firm.
eel aim ~ — He has never yet achieved a EFFECT OF DRAW: No advantage,
tiss L ond on SJSO^JIre Drew 3.30— Miss London double century in a single ... Tn-r-™,
awn Review •• 4. 0 — Leicester 4. 0 — Dawn Review season but with 20 weeks to go ALL RACES EXCEPT SB FROM STA L LS
■iater Fur 4.30-B1** Sky (nap) 4.30-Wmtar F^“ P ’ ^ 2 ' 3 ° : OtANBOIIEN CHASE STAKES S-Y-O Vihr to rriimpr £676
__ Co min 3 in near the end of the
o.-strong field he had Sweep sole:*
fast and clear throughout to clock
io-ase?, 1*3 of a seared -ahead of
the (hen leader, Graham Fletcher
on enttevant Boy.-
Stephen Frliebard was.sKKhtly
ister with Teistar. but had .12
Wt0
faster with Teistar, but had .12
faults. Final Py rat's Lucky
Strike became the first to dear
the water even though hitting
two other fences.
African second
TODAY'S ASCOT SELECTIONS
Racerard number fc shown on left, tMs season’s form fl cures in Mark.
Apprentices allowances in brackets. C— course winner. D — distance
winner. BF— beaten favourite. Draw for places oa light.
lOTSPua
partan -■ -
eel aim
liss London
awn Review
COURSE COER.
2.30 — Spartan
FORM
2-30 — Spartan
3 JO— Fire Dress
4. 0 — Leicester
330 — Miss London
4. 0 — Dawn Review
-a Rover (nap) — 5. 0 — Sea Borer
HOTSPUR’S DOUBLE. — Dawn Review and Sea Rover.
ARLBOROUGFL — Fire Dress, nap (330 1 ; Winter Fair (4.50 1 .
NEWMARKET NAP.— Miss London (530).
It is hard to believe now that
only a few months ago the cham-
pion's whole future was appar-
ently in doubt. The strain
imposed bv his uniquely arduous
way of life seemed to be taking
U-jJU {4 declared. Straight Forecast)
2 — 00 MEISSEN iMr J. KtWbltagi. I. BUfliag. 8- 10 G- Lew* »
6 — aZ3 SPARTAN It lQ HottitiM*. J. a*yfon. £-10 t. Ptggnft 1
8 — 00280 LOVELY SOVEREIGN (Ura M. itow», R.
M nri vyv 3
OO LUCKY PIERRE CMator P. Spfccrt. P. WaOwVn. 8-7 ... K."p. tw— 4
to beat Deep Diver at York | of German marks at Dusseldorf its toll at last and pessimistic Wwre -
S.P. fO RECAST. — T-2 Sputaii, 3 Mnissea. £ ltndi Sweet 13 a. 1 * L«ky
but started slowly.
on Sunday.
self appointed advisers like my- form guide-
wm bu]«9 a’sl Wbtu 5i4 to lVumlnB DoOUc Slbi
Fellow missed Wednes- Arthur ran twice at Royal F f ] * he might be I « **■»■«> ‘I^SLIELEJEF. *7™**
Vationai" Slakes For the AscoPteatijiff ' Ou7vskle 'and^tSen forced to lower his sights. ’ **, * v *“" m OrepMjna it ml jm» 25 tBoem. Lnticy Plene
■e Stakes and this colt by fioi^iins fourth to Ortis in the But Lesters answer has been nm" MdaJ won out o* an.*' eT *i a B? D co b mrtH tai^abi^t^iSSLliJr
•rs sire. Sir Gaylord, is Hardwicke Stakes. Lombard, last loud, clear and entirely typical. ( 7 i> on. 15 igaodj. sp.artan 'mu beat Udaa.
watching. His half-sister year’s German St Leger winner. To take fewer rides, to allow - - -
>t good filly Hill Shade. may be the principal opponent himself a higher rate or to travel 3.0: GRANVILLE STASES 2-Y-O £956 6 f f5. Straight
im, who cost 7J!00gn as a For ^ Arthur In Sunday’s Grosser less tirelessly would aU have 1 — first brief iLady mumw. 3 . Duaiov. a-u ...' r. la
* may lust beat Shady Preis von Nordrhein — Westfalen, eased the load. But all these -s — mezzanine <m« j. McDoasaiiii. 1 . bsmim. £-11 ..;• p.
” TSpfnrn? -ReHnimV «ire The number of evening fixtures things would have involved being 7 — Rfid-AIM (Lady BHawrbroold. W. Hera. 8-11 3
sFHIISj SM°1 fflgrtJr.iS ■- -i
uimtnghni Park Stakes bas W*tt ■ 4 r ' r >» * ! ’ i, ’ nS - h ' Wi!3 “ ver b& .a T,^ 7 ^^^' S “® F "'™' M ^ E ™ r ' 1
iASShTSK Slgf ltoS«fto&’. J a5 4 f!SbS Boueht recently -
But coon after. America n Robert
Rrdland. 20. a srudent at Yale
University, split the Britons with
A 35-7sec round- on . Charles
Stewart.
Earlier Fete»* Bcomn. v/lto has
his Ifflh hirtiday tomotTo-.v. won
the Basildon Rand Junior Qiam-
oinnph’p on Chalk: e Bov. who
hdonc'*. to George Bunn, brother
of Hickstead'e owner.
Peter, son of « Sussex black-
smith. htroes to make a career in
show jam ping- This is his first
visit to the Royal International
and be certainly handled Chalkie
Boy competency to beet Yvonne
Boyfield on Tempest by 0-4 of a
secocd-
Jane McHuefa took over for
usual rider. Robert Oliver, yi'ho
• has'Su. on Lord Sorcerer in rhe
small hunter da «3 and Major
Holme’s most consistent horse
was the wanner ones acain.
Page
Rugby Union 24
Yachting 3A
Arritery 24
Badminton 24
Well-filled field
Mrs L V. Ecklfey's Cu^bp
Sequence, shown by Karin Syron,
.won -boih the novice and overall
ridden pony championship amoos
a well-filled. field that had moved
north fibm Wembley-
SLUE CIRCLE STaS : 3. MauferrlSa's
R:!l3n'n<i ail ur)v Smlt IM. Frrahi
1 atm 3; \V. Arncbtra's Teistar is.
Cricket 26
Lawn Tennis 26
Golf 26 & 37
Soccer 27
Motor Cyding—.- 27
Friic'Mrti S.
PEJ1K3NS ENGINES STKS: F WWcVl
E*rr>a«ie IT- 1: R, Liner's Eliisli I®.
3 ; W. vretf<mrs Early Mbrahig.
a.
RIDSEN FOME8; s.t. 11 -2 U>. —
T. H. Earton't Coni Cncla Baled. 1 lad
rescree: M1<4 J Ceofc’s ChWi Serea Back.
B.e. is-: Uhl Mn I. V. EcnepM Cnsto
Sequence, 1 and riufflploa; Mr» N. A.
KoieitV Polyanthus, a.e. 14<S Ml: MR
M. G. Shorffs Le£ael .tarom 1 ; A Dtpt-
(Krt’i PoCy Pertins 2.
PONY VblNO STOCK CHAMP.: WH
D. nutlaras's Pcmuey uojpdf. Ris. :
A. DerUord'* Polly Aster. .
SflSTLAND PONY CHAMP. CLASS
1: R. A B. teiita'i £wari>89 of NeHiir-
I Vv. Xml; T. K. F. Myles's
laecnder.
o.O: GRANVILLE STAKES 2-Y-O . £956 6f C5, Straight Forecast)
1 — FIRST BRIEF lLady Munro). 3- Duaiov. £-11 ... R. BaKUMm 2
■S — MEZZANINE (Mn J. McDeonal'ti. I. Bsifll*a. 6-11 ... P. Wddroa B
7 — RECLAIM CLady BoaverbrooU. W. Hern. 8-11 3. Mercer 4
S — SHADY FELLOW (Ur G. Pape. Ja.i. N. Mmi«, 8-11 ... G. Lewis ■ 1
10 — TIGER SHARK iMf B. Eogerti, J. Dunlop, 3-11 3. Uncfley 3
S.P. FORECAST fi-4 Shady Fellow. 9-4 Reclaim, S First Brier. 8 Mezzanine,
16 Tijer Shark. —
Kepeat Eatress
Biifpev.-ood Venture repeated
Athletics
his-1970. success in the large hack
class, beatinu the good first-
season .-horse Right Royal, ridden
here, as he was at the Bovcu bv
his" young owner VicM - ’Spencer-
Cox. . _ ... _ _ . .
Sbalbonrse Last Waltz, who
beat Rid?ewci 6 d Venture -for the
chamoion’ship at the Boval and
here last year arid who has bad
a highlv successful season, would
not settle yesterday and did not
reach the 'final judging -for the
s«nvll‘ dass which ■went to Garden
Nectar. ' ’ ■ - • -
On ;Wednesdav and
J& sic ah’, ’the worlds rriofel exoen-
?:!yp show femoer. ; added *he ^ing.
Geonre V Gkrid Cah to the Wills
Grand Prix .they -won last Satur-
day ia a juiapcilf : with trvo
Americans.
Conrad Homfehi. ' on Triple
Obwr was second. ■ nearly five
seconds behind, with Bill Stein- :
kraus -and Fleet Apple third 1
after hitting . the’ final wall.
mav fie doll betwe^ Sea {SJffP T f 9 ^
and Rallvalit'er a nnnri incentnes have been offered to
to pSSHS thi S g d?s-
The first of his two winners bed
a sperial element of satisfaction
IU 1 -ukWj uver uus uis- __ ,,4. _ n anri-iai ncuieui u» sc iLMd-.Ll'-'ii
,_the Queen’s Vase atJRoyal daj^Vor P ' fo - r jt - Jeer’s ?ire.. Susan.
TV' (B B C) RACES: 2.30, 3.0, 3.30, 4.0
Bally glit ter receives 7Jb.
-*2 Rover Ft aimed Useful publication Mr Engelhard's horses. She was
7 - 3 , _ p„,_j acting on behalf 'of Mr Sidnev
'over, a St Leeer entry. h on^SIe anTl Everitt and. civins weigh* all
le a slow start to win in r „i round in the Bow Street Handf-
le at Newbuiy last month, ft ! 1 5*5? 2? cap. Corned v Star looked bv no
Star at the recent sale of the late 3.30: BED OAKS STAKES (Handicap) 3-Y-O Fillies £942 lm,
Mr Eagelhard's horses. She was (10. Dual Forecast!
(10, Dual Forecast)
C — 100532 MSS LONDON iMr 3- PearM'i. DovgtBa Strrflh. S-IO ... A. Murray 8
4 — 2 1P1 44 COUEOMB iD) iMzjor M. Wsnwi. D. ClumJi. .8-2 ... 3.. Mu-car 4
2D 0041 PINK SHANTUNG CD> iMr G. van tfsr- Rlalsi. W. LlattheU. .
S-5 f4H> B=3 . R- Mirstiin lS) 5
E — 004001 FIRE DRESS CMr J. Drllali. G. Todd, .ff-1 142b exj p. Dim- a
9 — IKTB HOQUELAtUB CD) iMra J. do RoduiclilldJ, J. QaiUo. S-0
R. Hutdrineou 1
mg tea Hover mv nap i tainPd in ■ro.Ho dinil will he- mearLS expe^ve. b — 004001 fxrc dress air j. dfUmIi. g. x«d4.:v-i f«b cjo f. Dun- a
nenced by the belief that C ome^ indispensable °tS breeders That . made 99. and although *“ hoquhlaure m, r^i ra j. „o Roa«:hii«. j. O«too. s-e,
^ ^ P ^ S . ra'rp* 'a f C h is^t ife ^ ^Vip-’ a t'h ‘Row 10 — 01300 ASTORIA (Col V. WHabt), A. SBdgML T-10 !!.. 9
, , . . This, and three further issues ™ 5 J“ e 10 Ko n — omiw mcoia jane ivir a. Myem. 3 . e. sutcuao. 7-9 n. cnco> 3
London, narrowly beaten for 1971. can be ordered from Maiden Plate., mine of his more 3 5 — mums per.al five iMr h. AU»r>. a. pm. 7-0 d. utiujia
BBA Jubilee Handicap at Weatfterhy* or Stud and Stable exoerteoced rivals ever really i*s— oorso slightly saucy iMi* h. HMazt. 3- Dwuop. 7-0 ...... s. dm a
ket recently, is chosen for Ltd.. 149‘ Fleet Street London looked like thwarting- the cen- L7 —o4MB4 sovereign gate iMr h. wuiteacntei. h. boiubsimuii. 7-0
Oaks Stakes, though she E.C.4. Tbe annual subscription hry. s. p«k. <71 ,7
t find it easy to concede is £15. Lochwinaoch’s was ia fact the - ’ s ~ r - F< ? A ^ CASl l- — 11-4 Mi f . u ”‘! on - * cauiomh. 13-3
Oaks Stakes, though she E.C.4. Tbe annual subscription
. t find it easy to concede is £15.
.se Nt>tes -and Hints
BLACK SKY IS BEST
By OUR COURSE CORRESPONDENT
SKI'*, favourite when beaten into sixth place
ehind Country. Retreat in the Sandringham Stakes
at Ascot last year, is napped to take his revenge in
ice today. 1 -
exTierteocea rivals ever really is — oor-oo slightly saucy «m?* h. HMazt. j. Dnaop, 7-0 ...... d.m a
looked like thwarting • tbe oen- 17—04MB4 sovereign gate air h. wtatnmi. r. BoiuatMad. 7-0
turj'. ■*- Pvrkm <71 ,7
Lochwurnoch’s was in fact the _ ’ ®- r - toRecaSt.-— u-« rtn d™. 7-2 mi» London, s Cauiomt.. 13-3;
thK ^SSSSi dfbi” of Iht 13 Juuoria ' iaealB JM '- 14 ,Bna **"■ sow ^ 3n
j£f fir ?S2 n a< rSo ra ^comn o rt ed Guide — P talc Stoiwm tot -Motmoor <eiw sad by X»=I *t arigutoo < 1*1
TsZ^iUri JUJ > 15 orf=» M Wvn soven (Mven by a'al M-HMiewr iivrn
fnenibenes, |£ was Mr Jun Joels July 9 .fcrraV. "Mm London was b-eion a <m by Fibrin tuna fw. 191*1 alNaWnMFlcet
hose Uucarry who mace the i7f. July 7 woodt. Parol Fire ivu beaten JW by P**il (save isiw ac Nauanarhet
deepest impression as she jailed Ila» JiUy 8 isood.. Caafan* W»a V«t«o «toat aial wliaa 4Qi xa Uaaa's Hurdciiao
home in the Raynes Park Fillies' "VC- 5Jb» at Saadowo Ft- ilmi July 2 tgood.i. Koqnelanrti was bealao 111 wliEn
Stakes. • 6111 to **» Coml Urraii at Newbury il’aml June 33 (^rowfi. Sovereign Got* wea
Thp thlid foal of H Petition *«■**■ 31 "ben *t» to Lucky Win igava 71bi at Chester «34* ' Joly" 36 igoofll.
“M 1 L 1 ts““ Mies LONDON b prererred to Coolwnb.
BEDFORD WORLD BEST
ByJtUtfESCOOTE . . ‘
"TTSE xte4r sdl-ont sacefess of the AAA Ghampionshins
, r at the Crystal Pal ace today and tomorrow is largely
. due to one athlete, David Bedford, who, by his promises,
ability to break recoords r . : r- — — r-
and dieerfully casual atti- He has set hJmseir -a: Sfifo
hl 4. tmaorA* /i^pinUAm metres target of imw SQseo— itceli
u t^ flrdS -seemiiigiy toolhardy. : .To^show
has become the nisi how fast ih« is, only one. Britob,
athlete Since ' Gordon Pirie Dick Taylor, has even run a 3JB0-
tO endear himself to the metre -race faster than 7min oteec
—let alone during a 5,000. metres
puDiiC. . event
,vi:^ — lei aione au
public. event
Most bf tomorrow’s spectators. - Additionally.
Clarke's
Bedford can live uo to his pro-: ^ fn
■les Benstead’s five-year- Fwwm
allowed only 41b for the ******* it ewmnr ftel
Rose Dubarry who made the
deepest impression as she sailed
home in the Raynes Park Fillies'
Stakes. •
The third foal of a Petition
mare called Pristina, Rose
Dubarry cost" 30.000 gns as a
yearling at last year's sales. And
no wonder, because Pristina's
first two nff spring were Manse
Tout, the best two-year old filly
in Europe in 1969. and Bed a. one
of the best in 1970 and Also 'one
of the only two two-year olds
to set Mill Reef off the bit
•&3R ^Jsr9s^%£^
Britqh.to break the world. .5,000; he-Mn^
metres record sulCe Pltie ini .memth- '
cnaths by which Country
r beat him in 1970 but
_ mSS LONDON
ter has not raced oa the Tony Murray was always sit-
ice that victory, although • TC T\T4P , r*irr^ pretty and the moment he
a highlv-SUCcessFul winter 1 TriLl JT JhU f asked Rose Dubarry to go she
lr Hlc c when w innin g four . disposed of Heavenly Music and
nr Fulke Walwva ®y Our Resident Correspondent Beck with an absolute minimum
or ruu*e waiwjo. * . •• of fuss or effort. Her next
time out. over this course Miss London is napped for me appearanre is likelv to be ' in
lance. Black Sky was third Red Oak Stakes at Ascot today, either the Low-Iter 5takes at
admirably consistent Hard- ffliy . ivas 'aarnwljr- beaten York or the Norfolk Stakes at
Sitting pretty
‘z'*S7. r#*0
Tony Murray was always sit-
TC TVAPF^irrh ting pretty and the moment he
Ik? iTAi IT JZil-/ asked Rose Dubarry to 30 she
disposed of Heavenly Music and
By Our Resident Correspondent Beck with an absolute minimum
L> +v*^i?. . .4 ^ w
» , . j c j. of fuss or effort. Her next
Miss London is napped For ale appearanre is likely to be ’ in
d °n that running comfort- w jj en j^xind at Nefwmarket in Dmacaster.
ids Les Kemnard s pro^rcs- . orevious raev* and on that Lady Beaverbrook s Eiskrah
Spartan, From the l ^ - made almost every, yard of tbe
i '■r’jg&fc
M
(l'iiic. sp-rwu, iiuiu lur j\rra cinn c hj «. »c mnrwIjnD a muoe almost every yaru or toe
Jack Clayton stabJe, should running to win the Foxwarren
s winning account m the lot of weight to the wTiiner. Handicap.
irn Chase Stakes t2.30). Spartan has missed several For a stride or so halfway up
„ _. ,, eugasemente recently to wait for the straight. Navy Blue may have
'-lav dcJrv penalty the Cranbourn Chase Stakes and ^nt his bead m front. But
„ * ' , r ■ ■ he looks to be tbe best of this Biskrah and Jimmy Lindley were
Dress appeared unfanaed fiekL having none of that and, rallying
-1 D .l 3 f = lu° Th icnmn^ Tt \ rt 1° -the Hyperion Stakes, with the greatest possible deter-
ourj eaili this month aiid Sharpen Up is favoured by Lhe mination, they stormed away
i 1 XnrI weij^Js . and the America o-bred again to win in sty le.
I Oaks rtaices Noei i, r-n-...
Dress appeared unfanded fi e ^L
inoiag from River Severn T
r i.. ,k:. >mi in
LsMLvttir!, -rf*- **rt ’f-miwiif.
Sr-avrr.s-n'4 TIM- SJjdKter . I: L*tv Z.
FnHoct-'s HsM MldnWrrje: t. TWjiWiss’s
E- c+tart 5. Small : Hltor J. Hstojf-*
Lord Sorcerer l! ’2’
EbOicK'. 2: Mrs W. Walls c« ft B.
PirVlm-ia ‘a ssorumm 3.
HACKA. — fund: Mlri «. Proriim'v ft
MK NT. 5*TUr»*» GhWmt IVrrr-- 1 •
.F. Stfltos - * Brna Csaiot* -2: Mrs J.
lomidri*; FWeao'e P«-.ii’kn': 3, L'/mi
MS s Ccur.ro'rT^Td't RVV , w»*oa V»erere
•T: Mils V. i So*B»r-U*e'» RirtI Royal
2. Mi .1. Ward's Sutv.CMI S.
KAC-tcvnC .HORSES « — IS
KH: M. <■ E«r8i<r'» e’otv^rrert
|! S. A. Wtrtl Mardeji GevJiswij 3: J.
CU.'k'a Bolv;srk. Hit. Elsbaes* 3-
• WOTSiPtlR’S “TWFLVF"
None of the hordes listed ia Xot-
spur'a Twelve to Follow is nonged
today.
J35A - r
’Bedford bbs made three pro-
visos for ftnu roving on Ron
Clarke's record of lSmin I6-6seC;
that the timekeeners i supply him
with lap times, .that the .neatber is
fair atid that ho feels as good as
when he setitbfe'£uroxieftn record
of 13 min 22t2sec in Edinbcccgh.
The audible lap times are prcixn-
ised;’:the weather forecsst is ficod
a off judging by tbe way tre has
beep traiiun^-Tsportinfi a bright,
red heedband-to mateb Ms bright
red sock*— I would say . his
provisos look like being met Even
so. . he is setting WxnSelf an awe-
some task.
-Talent tmrrne&tioned
Matter , of time
'ATT*. ■ — 7.15.. Qfteity ft wgwg r :
-8. .45. Kftti-ivte ?«*; 3.15. ncythga;
J.43v Fricccn 'flarj; 4.T3.
Rasibq IAB| 4.45. X*JplB Lad.
He may have. ■ get - Euronezn
records For - 5.009 and 10,000
metres, bat - world records are
.quite’ another matter — even given
■the fact , of his ability and that
■I have no . doubt "about Rad-
ford’s talent, nor about his ability
to live up to his . forecasts.
But .what should not be. for-
irottea is . that ho. wants to break
the world record, hot. .so much
.to show that hfe is the' best in
the world— a fact he Is. convinced
of anyway — but to show the -anti-
Bedford members of the British
Bofrd tbsrt he.. Should run in
both the 5,000 ’and 10,000 metres
in next iponth’s European Cbam-
•oious.'Mps: ' <He is selerted only
For the longer distonce.l-
This is. the greatest incentive
of : all and, having driven' : the
forecast, he bas forced himself
into a position where he cannot
back down.
Given the example of - Bedford,
perhaps it' is not tOo much to
-ask that the 1500 metres run-
OFFICZAL ECRATCHINGS
inevitably he will become the. ners. who trsditibnally go so fast
fastest man of all time over these' ia the beats, but who lack
vycdsudiri. Obi?7ver Gold Cm.. Dun-
«st*r * ttWaie Piflt Stakes. NaVeMklkU :
Fin nd Tanilran. --AU. ea»<B< ■»««»:
CrinUeiv: Dim?’en». Uncoja’s inn. Foxy
L«k » liert i. Si Ttlaiwi i d«n. Lora
-tVDterbnbfc (dcudl-aad Skip's Doctor
tdcadJ.
tivo distances. : .
• As v'dl es his three provisos,
tbe attitude of the crowd, their
applause, whether he warms up
correctly, what he -«its, the
humidity and so on arfe all vital
to his record attempt.- -
deterJn:na*fon -in the 1 final, will
dixnge their ways.
SLt Britons have sob-four
minute miles this season and the
field is a good one. Ian Stewart,
back to form after Alness, could
dominate the race.
Leice3 1 sr d e<u- ly qeed e d ^^^1^58-35 T.
fourth *** ™ ** Four-day Acceptor,
Dawn Review, Hotspur's selection for the Hyperion
- Stakes (4.0).
YESTERDATS RESULTS AT FOUR MEETINGS
'nANTkrtWN PA'HJv ’ ] NAVTAR., B ;e NearaUUi— A/drlo: (Mr ■ Alta: 18 Srr«st Arab. 13 Mi
."■ SAiVlfUWiV JrAEUBk,- £. teajamln), 9-0 ^ I l»tar f4tli). 53 Go»« PrlscKi. (
me to lUilUSU nucu iv»> «■“ CrjniHllp CJalrpc
Diver at York in May but ascots. a.sn. bporun: a.o. shady
now be a tougher proposj- f«Ud» : s.so. mi» Lo«*m mapk 4.o.
d is preferred to Dawn sharpen u»i 4 . 50 . Bud.
In the Hyperion Stakes
. . r STATE OF GOING
EliSG GEORGE VI AND
QN, ELIZABETH STKS
Ron at Asm, tarofrav. Psn
_ alalD UI Bngtn Brum 4 9-7. L>« 1 5 9-7. Ngr
h ! eF danser to Foe Dress ■ ^ . 4 9 - 7 . onfe a 9 - 7 . Fnlitieo * s-7.
11 l c _..|_v Mice AdWDce official sen 09 for tuomw 1 , SiinU-io 4 9-7. AccUai.iU^tioD o 8-7.
L „ Cmim'e Mice Advance omciai 80109 ior iunorr)w> SnutLiu 4 9-7. .AtcUBMUzanon o 8-7.
I be Douglas SmitilS OfLlSS nn^dms: As mi. RIpm . good to turn Cufllenwt 5 8-7. Irah F-M 3 3-7. Mill
Ayr- Warwick
R«c( a 3-7 U0 acceptors
t JACKPOT PROGRAMME AJVD SoP- FORECAST
SELECTIONS
HOTSPUR
liny Pr-perty
;p Morins
-tbou
acfss Yarano
nlm
; Saxon
FORM
2.15— PaaDty Property
2.45 — Spider Stewart
5.15 — Srython
o.45 — Princess Varano
4.75 — BcamJac Lee
4.45— The Sason
217 000000 TECLXYN (Da. Freeman. 6 7-7
C. Crowaloss iT» 1
S.P. FORECAST: S-S R«J Dtun. 5 Klondike pew. Sfcea-
berds Tanw. 6 Spider Sun-art. 3 Keep il uvicy. Blasoo Mine.
IO Sharp Singer. Super Scot, 16 oLhers.
4.0: HYPERION STAKES 2-Y-O £2.S68 6f (6, Straight Fortcast)
1 — 1221 DA1VN REVIEW iCi'-fMf C. Longraorfci. T. Leader. 3-Z E. EWIn 4
2 — 22-11 BLUE RIVER TVO.VDES iD) iMr K_ .Gibbcutsr. P. Smyth. 8-13 .
' ~ ’ L. Wssrtl ' B>
4 — 1 FAYEZ rD» IMr A. Ohatdlyl. J. Dunlop. 8-11 .... R-. Uatcbbr-on 6
9 — 11 SHARPEN UP (Di VMrs 1. van CutMnnJ. B. van Cnt&eni. 8-11
W. Canon S
12 — 00 GALLABOCCO IMr* ML Moorai.- 77- Houshton, 8-6 ... A. Murray 1
12 — 4 LEICESTER lUi H- Joeli. N. MurlaH. S-6 L... G. Lewis -3
S.P. FORECAST. — 13-B Dawn Rmlaw. 100-30 Sharper: Op. 7-3 ■ Fepez.
11-2 Sloe Rhfr WnnOtr. 7 LSlcebter. 16 Galiabocco. .
FORM GUIDE. — Dawn Review bt Mujon I level! , by 2 'il at Ascot i5fl Jana 18
iteevyi. Bln* RKrr TVonder bt Sdsiu- Uut (level) by 1 'jl at Uafi0«ld ffc. nSO
IB i bran. Fayez bt DnocDo ilevtli by a hd at SaJUbury (61) July 1 with
GoEabocvo (level) 91 away 5th lEnnl. Sharpen Dp Trt Freeman (roc. fib) by 31 at
Danculer (6(1 July 8 -tfinni. Leicester wan beaten 12’sl wMb Itb to Deep Diver
i level i at York (Sfj May II tftnoj. DAWK REVIEW should win again. Payee
dangor-
(GoiEg : Good to firm)
2.0: PETT1CDAT LANE S H'CAP £435
la
ZENO, <* B ZImom — Modaou Bovary
- (Mn, D. BarUnai. 9 7-31
O Gtbson ... 6-1 1
NAjVTAK. b c Nun ran £h — A/drt4- (Mr
E. Benjamin). S-0
(P- Kddory j._ A-
SOVEREIGN GUARD, 9 r c Sovereign
PaUi — Flattering iCart. LoaaLon).
9-0 . J- undley ...'11-4 &
ALp: 66 fielance. * ran. 41: II.
3m 13-1 -At. _uo&n Whiter. Newmarket.)
Tote: Win. 5op; forecast. 63p.
Alta: 18 SrTeet Arab. 13 MiiyMM
blar r4tb). 33 Golden Princess. 6 ran.
N4.J -Mr-'la SI ^-5m. - tW. MarAail,
Whltstoury.) Tote; win. 3Bp; places.
24b. 16b: dual rout. 55p.. - .. -
, 3.30 I5P: Ponaudn O. MerMr. 5-4FT.
3j Pare Fancy IE. J. Crac knoll. 33-1 i, 2;
NICODEJUUS. b c Red VjOJbond
Ulanora CMr R. _Ch inn i . 5- 8-1
Tote: Win. 50P: forecast. 63p.
TOTE DOUBLE: Biskrah and
Star. £5 (197 rteuami. ntSRLE
Maid «( Warwick tj, Wil-orn. 33-11. 3
Ateo: 5-2 Sea Guide (4rh'. 6 Tbames
Ve-b-y. I3.MUS Rosy. 14 Gay Ha(. 16
foutety. So Border .Orow. Mary Abyss.
10 ran. l*al: 31. «1 T-Ss. tW. Hern,
W. Cenvon ...8-2 3
EYES DOWN, b o Ma.cs. rail— Com
■ Valle* (Mr w. WlandnaD'i. 15 7-.
Top. Rose DnbArry abd
I13E-95 (5 tlcketii.
West llsley.i Tot*: Win. I8 p; places,
24p. 62p. 5 Sp: Huai forecw:, ES - 82
4-p (laWi Pearl RIVer fT." Cuter.
ll;8l li Seataroander (M. ^Sethertoa,
5-JF J 5. Wbdddon Green cD. McKay.
9-Z) 3. Alto: 33 ZAm beMX. .4 tab-
tad. 121. Im 40 l-5s. lA. Breasley.
Epsom). Tots: Win. 25p: forecast 47p.
_ 4.30 iSf ifiTyi: Re dr s ate s vl- Meteor,
7-8) I. Lady .Hney- CP. Weldrocu U-3)
2. Seroecnt Sun (A. Ccmslns, 2-1 Fi 3.
ass ■ liakissrsj
U. 1 domes ... 16-1 6
Also: 5 Rlisalan Reward. ApeUa. 15-8
Gin and French. S Span.:!) Foiada Pnlvee.
LANARK .
(Going : Firm).
Advance ndiiid solar GOOD.
, 1 r«r-> 304 143303 DU * LEV 'CD,. Any etc.
ECT OF DRAW: Low number* lavoured ut races _ os GOOD ISON 'CDi Cros*
of 71 nr more. 307 012333 SILVER GLN'G. Wecdci
..n*TrrcvPI«4\ s ’ p - FORECAST: 9-4 BrythOP.
Jackpot Prefix 1): MONl UAbI Jiol< Goodtviw. 4 Silver Bmp. 10 Oiaha.
iG STAKES Value to winner £426 6 f 3 ^ (|>refix 4) ; MXDDLETCW
(15 declared) rmn 7F n. Dual
aoo DON AG A MORE -Di. HuO-^n 4 9-7 Sea ], r “'* , a 403
too FL1 BIRD -DI. CrowJes. 4 9-0 Plant 13 4
ill) LNMS «ML. C«aip. 3 3-10 S '^T r “ 1 40S
:it QUALITY PROPERTY .D). Bunts. 7 412
i Sharp Singer. Soper Scot, 16 ethers. 4.30: SANDRINGHAM STAKES (Handicap) £639/ l* = m- '
3.15 (Prefix 3): WILLS £ A STELLA HANDICAP g — e a flare slack sky tMr g. Nc^nan). c. B*n*ti«r. s 8 - 4 . ... D-CaRm a
£1,575 lm of (5, Straight Forecast) g — isosre winter fair imp, 3 . mcOlxj said). 1 . eauim. -4 8-2 c. Lewis . _,s
SOI 070003 DKYTHOS 1 CD 1 . FelThurst. 6 9 0 Hor rocks 2 7— 311011 CAMUS U3) iMf S. Ucmtl. L. Kcanard. 5 8-0 C. Leonard (7) 1
302 001 DID PRINCE OF DAROU.X. Bewicke. 4 8-10 B— -403101 COUNTRY RETREAT (CD) «Str C. Clare). T. Wahvyn. 6 8r D . .
E. Hide 3 R- F.-BHott 3
;ni 143303 DUALUV -CDi. Angus. 4 8-7 Tulk 1 S — 0D433 ELT3 (Mrs J. de RotlachiHU. J- Oaytan. 4 7-1S ... R. HutcJiirwuu I
303 101F42 GOODISON 'CDi Crnssley. a 7-12 C. Ejccleslon 4 11—420444 AIAYIHTIC iD) IMr R. Rncke). K. Partus. 4 7-18 ... J. CorLnt tSk 4
307 012333 SILVER ELNG. Weeded. 4 7-7 DuIfteJd 3 S.P. FORECAST. — 6-4 Cantl{e._3_Wtnler Fair. 4_Cpuntty_Retreot.. J5i2_Black_
S.P. FORECAST: 9-4 Bnrttion. 3-3 Prince of Oaroun. 3 PBy. 10 Bod - 18 AlevUdc.
aodtvan. 4 Stiver Bins- 10 Oiahn. FORM GUIDE.— Cue We bt Wclsb Windfar (gave lllbl by 21 at SoLUbury (1*^00
July 1 i Or mi. Country. Retreat bt Arctic Judge uavc Sib) by 'll over toddy 'a courM
3 45 fPrefiX 4): MIDDLETON PLATE 2- Y'-O Fillies ^“3 disUnre July 34. 1970. «vltb OeCk Sky (gave Kb) 7«al away 6tb iBoadJF
“'™ ' ■ , _ La»l Him not Black Sky m beared 451 whhi Srd to Hardbake rtrrt lSb'awfr
£690 If fi, DUSl Forecast today’* cuimr and dlstince June 16 with Can tile tree. 34n»t Jnst aver 11 away 3th
... „ ■ .Dr i \ne. anna*. S-B Tulk 7 »heav» ■. Winter FcJr wob beaten 31 when 3rd lo Wabash (save 3Ibi at .Baxdock
d(V4 D2DB34 *>CROPOLA. Hcb.o-1, 8-3 !.. .. Wnn>e 2 PV . »l*:rai Ju!>- 3 iDOOd). Bud was benlBh SI When 3rd. ID Sivy BlW Dml) at
403 00 BEGONE.. Arrau*. S-6 Richard Hutchtneon -5: 3 SaaUnr.-n Pit. Il’iml June 11 ( eery sO!ti. Atavistic Vre* beaten fliyl «**«» 4.1b to
412 420003 PRINCESS KAREN. Thcnus. S-3 T- Ives -5i 6 D^raaslown 'rec. £:t» at Nenmarkel tl’jmJ July 7 iooocLI. Stack Sky look* main
413 31 PRINCESS VARANO. S. HaU. 9-1 L. Johnson 3 Threat «) WESTER FAIR-
418 OSERMTGLLk, ELey S-B E. Hide 1
421 823 WELSH SPRITE i&f*. Wt)«. B-S
r. EccJes4un 4
S.P. FOKECAST : 10-11 PrtoceA Varooo. 5-2 «el*h Sprite.
6 Abbe Lane B Prim eta Karen. 12 Arnpola. IS other*.
J31 LOR D.ARNlE. Ethcrlnyibn. o 8-7
L. G. Bro,« n a
190 MISS MARVEL ’Di. C. Bell, 5 8-7 A. Ru»-ejl 2
JOS MARGAF.LT ROSE- Annus. 4 8-4 .... . Tulk 10
O TUDOR THANK lOU. Kenneaita. 4 8-4
£- Ctiifc ■
5.0: SUNNEVGSILL PARK STAKES 3-Y-O £852 2m
f3. Straight Forecast)
inn LITTLE KUO RIVER. CoUtngwood. 3 8-3
Ctmnurton
4 — 041 SEA ROVER i Duka of Norfolk). J. Dunlop. 9-3 ... R. H n UMw en 1
5 042029 BALL VG LITTER l BF j iklr A. SbCed). P. Smyth. 8-10 P- Waldcau 3
11 — o NEW CHAIRMAN (Mr P. Griffith), R. Akebtrrst. 8-10 .
G. Rasnfaaw 3
»«tCAST 4 Lor Darnf- 5 Q««*lK» P^oerty. 6 Eniilv 303 053480 OEffZBVAl
iZiSZZ .307 U00001 ROYAL E ?
;e£x n j: arDEEB HANDICAP £650 of (12) ^os
IJ0 BLAbON MLNT iCOk Uhcr.naiot..^ Jjjj^ . ^ # s ObL^aliott. I
4.15 fPrenx 5): F.AIRLIE HANDICAP 3-Y-O £690 w l ' nttrau ’ G. RuBiavr a
lm (5, Straight Forecast) S-P. FORECAST 2-5 Sea Sovrr. 9-4 Ballyolltter. 12 Now Chairman.
jo- 341013 BEAMING LEE. « -uw.-i-jlr. B-4 T. Ive« 15' 3 FORM GLIDE. — Sea Ro*or « Ke9*nf* Park HeveD hy »-l « Newlmry 41m 5f 60p)
sriS n-'inga XVNI4&- Anzus. 7-9 — 2 June :4 fgcudi. EaSnHMr wu beaten more than 61 when 7th to Proaper
023460 OBSERVATION tC*. Theme*. 7-7 rrre. 3!bi a; Sacilonn Fk. U*4mt July C-tflOOiU. Nw Chamaon was Iasi Ol 12
3 C. lVtohani i7l 1 ta tvindrush Ucreli at Nnwbury (In 3f) Jiaj 31 (soed). SEA HOVER ftbt C)tM
307 UOOOOI ROYAL ENCLOSURE, H«l 3 h. 7-6 -61b e*t ^ ^ cbince.
ft’lBdfl TIKI D OR. IV. A. S’rptt^rn 7-/j. Core W* 5 TOTE TREBLE: 3.0. 4.0.' s.o rae«. DOUULE: 3-30. 4.30.
p. FORECAST: b-4 Beuminv Lee. 5-2 Tiki d'Or. 9-2
i>. 5 Oh-retration. B Roiil Enclcjare.
Todd. Man-.ru.) -Tothr Wtt, £1-19:
places. 40p. alp. 43p.
2.30: AYLESBURY PTE 3-Y-O £690 3f
HIGH TOP. t> ar bL t twrpgi-On — •
Cautanae (Sir J. Thorn). 8-21
W. Carson S-1 1
RUSSIAN jMNjpy.gr c Riobt Boy^-
Boevn (Mr ff. Preunj, 8-11
. TL. Huichinton ... 10-1 8
COURT COBBLER, b c Malor Wruwi
— SamdbMapOB- tMt R- Ctiffoid-
lacun. 8-11 ... J. L'naley 6-4P 3
: Afto; 914'rthlStUuO Vole.. 1 Dynastic.
20 Gallann ildu. Fnilowflild. MkMtny.
8 ran. 3L nk. 61 S-Sj. (Bernard van
Culsem, NewmOrftct.l Tore: Min. 82p:
places. USp. 21p> 13K -dnal ftMwast.
£12 03.
■ 3 : 5 ! — FbXVWRWEN "1TCAP £841 2m
s«s!sjss:. ,n rs9s;-
■ -J. bind ley-. •• 6-2JF 1
ToRSELLLNO. b c Danina Bov— Kirty
Quick .Mr, D. T-W -- a
NAVY BLUE. bT Majority Bug—
Waterscape iKUIor C. nr-Ju&i. 4 8-1
.M. Thotaoa 10-1 3
Also: 5-ajF- Ordilo (4th). 7-2_ St
EfiiesO . Totes Win. 34*1 pianos. J8p,
l9p; dual lorecwt. 7®P-
3-3S : RATCres" PA3UC TWO- YEAR-
OLD FILLIES* STKS ’ l- '£6*0 . 51.
ROM DUS ARK Y b t Ktarlon —
PMsttoa tMr H- jn-tr. E-4
A. Murray ... 4*1 1
HEAVENLY MUSIC, h t Tadflr, M«Ofly.
2 30 1 5ft: Sally's Choice tj. Snaarsve
4-6F) 1; Go Idea Bmlaet rC. -Eccleston
4-1) 2; ’Yearn Dirk rC. Wiaitam 13-2) 3.
Aisb:..6 IrfcS XnOaby. « rah 51.. tt.
6 S 4-5s. iR: BijLii, NOrXey.) Tott: Win
Up; forecast 2S&.
. 3.0 t?fi: Ddachlo dp IB. 3aab. 4-11F)
1: ,F»SP«=«ne (J. Seaanre. IOO- 3 O 1 2d
GoW-Dotro (T. Ive*.. 12-1 j. S. Alta: B
Brevity. 4 ran. si: VI. Ini 25s. iF-
ArnvAropa . Newmarket.) Tores Win. J3p:
rent: 1 ap.
■ 5-50 ■rlum): LyreUo «|. Low. 15-BF)
1; Parcel Pom *CT Ecclretan. 5-2 j 2:
Baranjture ID. te-aerhy, 9-2r 3. Alst»:
7-2-TortH9u i4rh>. l3 Racam. 5 ran.
) > 7 !: 'al- Sm . S 2-3*. ij. ■ w. Watts.
Ki'shaio&d.) T-o't; W'n : 24p: 1'cait: 61*.
Preciour Tack. Golden Gem. 10 ran.
IV. Oi. In)' i®. I -3k. <W. Eern. West
IRJcy). Tola t WffiiSBp: idvcn, Iho,
17pj. .lip; -dtMl iamot £1-87.
TOTE DOUBLE: Grecian Maflna ft Peart
River £5-60 174 (Jdittt). TREBLE:
iRIcy). Tola: WUi, 3 Bp: places, 1
Hpj .Xlp; -dtMl iamatt £1-87.
River £5-60 (74 Llcli(D). TREBLE:
Lovm-s Fountain £ Red Skies.
£9-09 133 Uckeu.j
.4.0 (7ft: Hvrdlanma fA. J. . —
v-2t 1. Tun Bny (J. Erevrevs. 6-2). 2.
B-Ddna rB. Jeoo. Evens F) 3. AMo: 6*4
Etet Free t4tbi, 16. Nuclear Blast, 5
ran. 'si. 61. In M 3-5a. .(J..- Ormsren,
CATTERICK BRIDGE
(Going s Firm)
Rico mood). Tore: win. T5p: iumr_
£l-65e. -
_ 4 SO lH'-raj: Henna tA. 3. Rusal],
5-6F). 7-. Fret* Scpttta (A. LauncMraty.
33.-3). _i: MSSsa Bravo IA Mtlluu.
g-li. 5- . AU?? 3 Grant 1
FuTWbrecK."T5 , Csjaj BW,
GaiMa tarhV 33 Explorer. & ram. &i:
D.l'- Am. -3Ba IQ. Richards, Penrith.)
Sri® Sews?**’ ,5> - 7Bp - ■ a2i,:
5-0 Omit Gama Rusmer CJ. Lynch
5--F) V. Halktssimo 'W. McCasklU ldfl-
30) 2; The Dtaabat (T. Seaoravy ,8-1) 3.
Also: 8 Galica. IS Devious (4rhl. Can
Mnto. 16 Some Trust. Glancarr-jr Gnld
NMrttt Dram. 9_rrt 7 V, 41 . lm fSs.
£F. Freeman. Cheltenham) T6W: Win
f?i4pS w -
«r. lo-2
4 Border
8 ram. 61 :
EAVENLY MUSIC, h f Tudor, MFtofly.
— Privai i»r J. Kiaderjonv Sjl _
D. xrrn B-4r 2
ECK. sr’f-B* ®<-uh (Sir R.
2.30 i7l)t Wbtj Left (S. Byrne. 6-1)
1: Saonny Gal ID. Wntbltr. 10-1) 2:
Blrolt ■ Mr mortal ip. Bradley, io-i> 3.
Also: 100-30F Tar Me Chree. 3 BeVraeli
fe u uy^:- &nast?
Unices: 32p. 23p.. 29p: dTaect: £3-13.
« 5-0 . ,5 pt^ro«JT«P (B. Cannorton,
6-1) 1: Crretal Clyde iA Robeoo. 5-1)
S: Cdctns Fknvar iG. Cadwalaflr. 6-4F)
S. Also: 9-4 SandyviUe, 33 Georae^s
Frida i4tiu. Caltborini, 6 ran. i»i. * 1 .
VMn: 94P: plfacM: 65b. 52pi ftcuu
(CO " 37 ■
£FT FrWMfl. CbeJtenbBin} T6t«: W to
BS?; places, lip-, 34p.- 12p: dual forecavt
BECK- Or f -Bt Beoh- (Sir R.
Mazdonald-Bucbenen). 8-4
ij. Lvtvw ... -i-i.a 3
76p.
TOTE DOUBLE
Abo; 7-3 Mrs Multan. 12 Penult*
I41!0. 30 Desrrt VO'.ta, MhCv CKKsll.
T ran. 51; sh M. Im 8 5-5t. IT.. A.
Wauah. N?swi«-fcet. 1 Tate: Win- £1-D4:
Placra: 34p. 13p; Hurt rust. 50 p.
£3- 95 1 "155 HcfcatsS. TREBLE : Dr Heine
Oin. Kardlemtna-6- Ceme Renner £9-85
<26 tl^ia.) JACKPOT tan sin vrtnacreO
£234-05 12a tlckrai. . .
4-, 10 BOW STREET. H'CAP 3-Y-O
£616 71.
11 KLEF moving .CD., w. A- sw^naan. 4^-u = ^ (Prefis 6 , : DUNOON PLATE 3-Y-O £690
.- n .. n L'L.'IKE -Di. Fa:rliufbi. 6 S-U Horrorlui 7 jj ,p_ Cfraiullt forGUSt)
COURSE SPECIALISTS AT TWO MEETINGS ...
■55 ■r.ysi Vtlmart^o. R^nu-r on.. ^ iS , 12 6 „ oco , no
i.usiftis TARTAN (CD*. Anitii- 4 7-13 603 00Wl n H Kl^G FLT • •
JMLFHtkDS TARTAN (tJJ - AD3 ^ fip4 -fliasao K1PPH. L AO- \noJ« 9-0
VKr LINGER CU». E. Duty. 5 7 9
klilrtrosh B
]ijm iP. Straight forecast)
601 000300 BLEU S'- ELL. Hcwo. 3-0 7
603 "otnjnn KIVG RL TCfa. Weta-rn «)-(. D* 'n-Jd 3
604 Cisaao KIWU L AO. \noj« 9-0 TUI- -
606 0001100 ROVAl LEGION. G. R ^ on " :,rto = *
(.08 00040 THJE s.A* ON L- tier, nr on 3-0 L. G. Brn«n a
611 00300 KING S BELLI.. 5tr“l R-Il t. ftca -31 4
a P. FORECAST: - J ‘ 4 K:pp s Led. 11*4 K:np f Belle. 7-2
nsVsaxon. 5 Blca F«tll- 3 K-np Rutm IJ Her*: Le^ios.
TOTL TREBLE: 2-45. 3.J3. 4.J3 »jr*n. DOLEi-E: 3-15, 4.15 I H-j.-j.;--- 13. G- Todd IS
JACKPOT i All * D-a3,Bs 1- - "r*W 11-
ASCOT
CourM winners---*- 4.0 tfift: Dawn Re* . Cwise win
vi.-m lift. 4.30 tl’zmi; Country . Re- Mint tin. Kee
tree- ■ I ’sol. Tartan (51 :«
Jrr:L* 5 - .-:aee Mareh 1966) — Pi*»on 3-15 um 3D:
6fi w. Le»-.:v 36. R Huichlntou 33. V} «i«
Mere*- 52 Keith 18. B. Taylor 18. ^ *- 15 llnJ
p. Co.-;. 15 LietUe; 15. A. Murray . Jockey* i si m
IZ. D-rr 10. .lMin56n 26. 5
Trainer*.— Mar! eis 34, In I.reUr.d 28. A- R,mpl1 l ® -
u. 2i. Ana,tr6itg la. Douolas Trainer*.— S.
& 9 tt^ 1 5 Hera 14. ran CuLtetn la, Cau-itu 18. Z
Course rrftwfrs. — 2.45 f 5f): Blason
Mint tST). Keep Moving *571. Shepherda
Tartan (51. twiiei. Sharp Slraer (5fl.
3.15 tlm 3D: ' Brfthon tlm of). Dual in
COMEDY STAR, b c Toni Fool — Lettn
Wote (Mr 5. Erertttl 9-9
SWEET SINGER, r*i f%?an Socket —
Ttai? trees (Mr W. Ha-tUotn 8-2
_ A. Murray 7-13
MAft.AOllA. b-Mled VMsboBda— po*M
tMr* A- Xekouaiou 7-0 » .
M- Kattla ... 13-1 S
BATH
(Going : Hard)
J? ? Mta hAnz fD.
' 7 ‘« 1: R'eB Haded IL Side.
S'? ! « < r l>urt .WSp" 1 (B- Conaortoa.
■ ■ Ate0 = -iL'SE _The sob wzp. im
I 3 ’ 2 CgwMrTon Prince. 20 Royal Ben,
?. . 1 ?P.-_. 3 1: Bd. 2m 30 2-5*. tT. Fairhuut.
pUCT5:
K3?“55!l. ,I '.-S‘ Brown. 16 -JV S . -Also:
1?9 Gtad-* FrMe. . A re a. ■ Jtfc: . 81.
27 4-5* 0 . - w. WWW. Rkftmomft.
Tore: Win. 12p: loreewst, 15p-
4-30 (Ip ' 5T ITOylf TUM -Act fR.
Sttn. 3-lft 1. Mr* cMW lt. Johnson.
7-81 2. A* W-tmtarer (£. LdrtJn. 7-2) 3.
AfW--B,C»Mra ,4Hhj. 74 wjtaMn*. 20
Doer Polly. 6 ran. ah hd. 41. 3m 8 3.5a.
Ol. Pr*«otL. K*wme(7ttt). TMt: wiiu
0-0" "rSTI : Copper Unity' (J. Wflaani
11-4V. 1: IreHnm tT. Mercer. T1-10F). 2:
Tre«-n-e Omit tT- Rotre'.*, T-Sk 3 A'-rt:
10 Glint (4*h). 53 Wh*ta«HnH. _5 ran.
4|f. til; 62 1-5*. tS. Syrift. Eptaen.)
Tote: Win. 44o: forecust, 5®P.
T96; puees.168. 2Sp: tiuU rcbtt. 31b.
Tropcahl^ (7-2t was wltlt drawn not under
ortjss. Role four applies to all bets.
DMuWos OOp m an pound.
. 3-0 £jl a m 40JJ; LtndtNr (A. Rob-
*?n WW 1: SbxePtve tM. btrch g-11 2-.
Cntctal Moannt rE. Jobbnn 7-2) S.
lUm: l in oti. Goodsiow tiusa: lm
3ft. 4.15 (iBt): Observation (aft-
. Jotkey* tsincr Match 1966J. — £.
.lOBoSbn 26, Scagrave 21, E. Hide IB,
Afro: 3 Palladium. 11-2 Juttol* Bov
t4lh>. M ClnaraMe Cs*n. Frrt Hind. 7
ran. Si. 1 til- lm sic. fR. RouniiSQti.
Rlawburyi. Tata: Win. 22p; pb(u. 20 p.
31b: dual f’e^t 76p.
2.30 (lm K 13 vj- Ltmr*i Le** <F.
W«’*e6n. l-at. 1- tVR>kriW4 IJ. M* r C*i-,
1 - 5 F) 9 : Level HaH »G. Bw, 70 - 1 »
3 . AIm: 16 PlairtM"! Rridpn 20
S re’TtVM*. (drift. Raymond’s Babu. Kit-
-Kate. Tee BOnr. Royal TiTtblltm. 9
raw. H’ 61. 5m 3*. r«3- Balding. Wev-
hill.) Tote: Wia. 54p; ofticos. 11*.
10’t*. I^p: do»l f’cnct. T5p-
3.0 fTft: Grere-a M-raia IP. Wa4rti.
100-301. 1: PUattar tc. Leonard. 5-4 Kl.
5 l Ervin Boy it. Carter. 100-3U. 5.
t i. Douglas Trainer*.— S. HaU 36. Anapa 21.
iui'etn 14, Cou^liii IS. t)eei* 5m:lh 17. M.
i. Tree ]S. Ee-’etrev 15. w. Gray 15. W.
fitopBenson 15,
4-55: HEATH ROW MU’S PTB 3-Y-O
£690 I’.ra
LOCHW1NNOC11. b c Above Sui? Irion
— Edwin* (kin j. MiddoekE). 8-11
U Plssntt ... 13-8 )
4tV»S, ■SSSMt* J. v .ra.Sl:
Hall. Middlehetn.) Tnt*: Win i«p{ places
tap. 21 p: forecast ri -94-
TOTE DOUBLE! Mon tre mi* a Hard
sg. "w aj* jgagTOtw c ia
H fit \
RUTHLESS
s
...
[; ■? • * r.*"‘ .• v * ; •*-' --. ti. r '”
■43t:
tr . t ■■!■ •<■- r.i . ;v «
England, w/w won ffee toss, fcaae scored 252 for eight
wickets in their first innings.
By E. W. SW ANTON at Lord?*
Indian spin bowlers,
mHF. Indian spin bowlers, Bedi,
A Venkataraghavan and Chandrasekhar, in
a prolonged exhibition of guile and craft, stole
the chief honours of the first day of the First
Test, -.played in hot oppressive weather before a
crowd of 14,000 and in the presence -of the
Queen.
The pitch looks almost as dry as the rest of the field
—there has been no rain at Lord’s for three weeks— and
this trio turned the ball more than is usual on an opening
day- 1 n ..hni.i_
• Z' : j
IN FINAL
By BILL HARRISON
A DEVASTATING per-
A form a nee by the
Wimbledon champion,
Evonne Guolagonc, and a
lucky survival by Patti
Hogan, at Leicester yester-
day provided a repeat of
last year’s final for the
Green Shield Midland lawn
tennis tournament.
Neil Coles lead^i
by one stroke v
as 40 break pa€
By MICHAEL WILLIAMS at Bremen • .
I N the first round of the German Open champior ■ '
Zur Vahr yesterday, more than 40 players b’ : "
par of 74 with Neil Coles, of Great Britain, the be -
a 69. mi_ i -» ■ ; '
yr-vl
Miss Goolagons crushed Six players are only a shot
Helen Gourlay without loss of behind, among them the re-
The leade
a game, in 36 minutes.
markable Huang Lu. winner
a**
was completely ruthless and 0 f ] as [ week’s French Open
with memories of their previous Hugh Jackson, of Ireland,
meeting in the Fans final, ad- B ernar( j Gallacher, of Scot-
V5&!-
I
raitted : “ I did not want to let
her into the game.”
No one could have survived
against Miss Goolagortg in this
land and Roberto de Vicenzo.
The British performed credit-
69 — n. c. cai«s ten.
•Jtf — G- Marsh ItemUii.' f
<Irel£Dffl. K. H. Catdt
Loan Lu tFonwaii. S. rC
i Argentina!. B. GaHaoBer (Gfij
71— S. Brawn iGBi. t.
iGBi. P. McGntaem tOBj. p. |
ton (Australia).
72— M. ■
Dundee lATflvnttM 1 . W. G 04 &
ZfaJjrdi. G. HnK (OB). T. fc
mood. She made no mistake as Oosterhuis and Peter McGuin-
ablv for Stuart Brown. Peter iccnnuui- o. mcCoh*
PshAr MrT.uln. Mopwa i OAR I. D. Talbot
.. .. . ___ prohablv off Chandra's wrong ’un.
Will the pitch go. No one Chandra's wrist spin from the
can say. and to those with an Pavilion and Venkat’s off-breaks
First Test
scoreboard
impulsive urge to prophecy from the Nursery end had been
minht at IH a warninff « harness same time, but it was
oqe might add a warning ... w h en the j a tter was succeeded by
remember Headmgley a tort- the slow-flghted leFt-arm of Bedi
ENGLAND — First Innings
G. Boycott, c Engineer, b Abld ... 3
night ago. that
The interesting thing will be tipiied
to. 'see how Illingworth and In I
ICll-OI 1 A 1 Ui L>CUi R -nr I n „lrhiTPcf - G _l T — . V
Jl 13 .? England s difficulties mui- Chandrasekhar * 30
tipiied 3 . B, Ed rich, c Yenftataragiiaraji.
she swept powerful drives to bnth
tv in 35. flipping the lines with
deadly accuracy.
Miss Gnurl.lV. who could not re-
member bavin? previously Inst a
match without winning a game,
tried hard, but the best she could
do was to force four advantage
games.
Exciting match
__ . , _ Watel rah Dime iAfc"-ol3D. H. a
ness are all on 71, with Guy d. Mrodiaad igbi. g. wn ic
Hunt, Hugh Boyle, Doug Me- lC S?"5&. SSMSViSSmi
C leliand and George Will in a ^
larger grOUp OO 11. iG-rmam. r. Von Doock fBnj,
Play became progressive! v ~ " ' ~ )
slower as the day wore on ana Gallacher a Iso played as'
towards the end players were at any time this year ai
taking five hours and more to nearly did the four shof
(GBl. I . Flans I can. P. TbrI
O. HaldlUwon i5. AMn). W.
iCrnnaoyi. F. Van £KmcJc lUrj,
Gallacher also played ad
set around. This is far too long In a total of eight strob* ■
for comfort, but while three balls bad twos at the third, eigl ■ -
In Bedi's first over Edricb was
Gifford in their turn perform drawn forward by one that prob-
on a surface which the India as w ? fj i
have used so well.
came fast and low to slip where
Veokat did very well to hold it
Knott, with support from IlUng- at the second try, knocking it up
worth, played far the best innings as he overbalanced backwards.
of the day for England, while in
the last hour and a half Snow,
as he has so often done in Test
matches, batted with a nice
balance ot caution and forceful
strokeplay.
His was an admirable No. 9
D’Oliveira trapped
D'Oliveira’s entry aroused much
the loudest greeting of the day,
which he acknowledged by hitting
the first ball for four through the
b Bedi IS
D. L. Amiss, c Engineer, b Bedi 9
B. L. d’O live Ira. c SoEkar, b
Chandrasekhar 4
fA. P. E. Knott, c Wadegar, b
Venkata ragbavan 67
*K. mingworth, c Engineer, b
Bedi : 33
K. A. Hutton, b Venkataraghavan 20
J. A. Snow, not out 51
N. Gifford, not out 4
Extras (b 4. lb 6 . nb 3) ... 13
i m
Total ig Wkts.) 352
Fall of wickets : 1-18. 2 - 46 . 3-56,
rua wuis duuiu nuic nw- o I w«ii au. mui tmuuaa tne jfi e 7 * c_tai 7 in
innings which could have an im- covers off the back foot. How- ' ‘ “ 3 ‘ B ^ 223 -
portant bearing on the outcome. ever, after a moment or two.
I know if I say that the skill J 1 ®* W™ very much as* o. al
St *P‘JL. h « w, JS5 Eneland " d && r ~=7~ * l
BOWLING
O. M. S. W.
ui uie iLimdu spin uuwiicy ana i r> _ ,
its resultant success did old were 61 for four.
hearts good, many may well say , Ani j s f - „ P-? tent Iy. under stress.
Venkataraghavan.
there he is “ again," lauding the stayed SO minutes in all on either Chandrasekhar 38
past at the expense of the side of lunch, watching two good B*di — 34 17
present Yet the risk must be 1X1611 go -and the field gathering To bat: J. 8 - E. Price
taken, for the course oF the play even closer.
Illustrated ■■ many old-fashioned
and neglected truths.
„ _ INDIA. — -S. Gavaskar. A. V.
He. like Knott, can use his Mankad, *4. L. Wadekar, d. N.
To bat: J. 8- E. Price.
INDIANS. Gavaskar,
I D.ilfon. the Wimbledon serai-
finalist. o-fi. 3-»i. ft-4- "as an rx-
■"i^abJe affair with fhe American
all but talking herself into ilrfcjt.
She again W her emotions take
over, was nn the terse oF teais,
and on at lea^t two occasions
slammed the ball out of the
ground.
In the eod Mrs Dalton, who
should have tied un the matrh
when she had an advantage break-
point in thp loth same" of the
sesrnnd yeU limped to deFeat with
a strained anile, which later led
□ „ thf nihpr ,nmi- iina betas ot 13U are persisted 11th and should have had
finil. where Mi« Hn ? an heat J.tdv ^ th .^. re .. is ™thing anyone can ft the 17th but missed fr •• •
SSI® S S*** W B b, ^; B D " "Coles* 1 was fortunate to have an Brown, 24, one of the . ^
""IbTe affair with the American earlier starting time and it was promising young British -
all but talkinc herself into defeat, no surprise to find htm setting the naa ? goad ! round of il wi
feeL
Brown, 24, one nF tht
E romising young British
ad a good round of 7J wi
one lucky break. At the
drove into the riugh. hack
but then fired a four wonc
and holed for his birdie.
Oosterhuis was a noth
pace, for as 1 wrote yesterday Zur
Vahr is reminiscent of Wentworth,
where he has played some of his
best golf.
to hrr scratching ft ora the mixed chip and a putt.
Certainly he looked immediately Ooster
at home, playing faultlessly for 15 quickly
holes, by which time he was six u-sed his
under par. But at the 16th, with was a '
its barKdrnp of towering pines,
he pushed a two iron to the right Crickrl
and failed to get down with a 1
quickly find his form and ' M1 *
used his driver eight rim
was a mnsidered gamble
doubles.
Spin and flight
feet, and one visualised him as S.irdesal, G. B. Vlswauath. tF. M. ~
a possible saviour of the innings f 1 D, .S® Dtar - S. Abld Ali.
tHgEESESI: K B - County Week Lawn Tennis
Hea\y pressure
Even so. Mrs Dalton kept up
some heavy pressure, but too often
Everything else was, hit straight
as an arrow, and unlike some he
was also comfortable on the'
U A ITs VICTOR
greens. He missed nothing and got
in one Jong one- a 10-yarder, for
a two at the 11th.
Miss Hogan nulled out the big
points when they most mattered,
but sbe came sn near to throwing
cover Bedi’s straightening turn '
Chiefly, or course, we were re- down the hill, and edged a catch ^ATmpires: C.. S.
minded that the most taxing of to the ‘keeper. S Constant.
but sbe came so near to throwing
it all away. On this display and
that of Miss Goolacong. she can
hold little hones oF repeating last
week's shock win over Miss
Goolagnng in the final.
Well-equipped Mr Lu
The Universities Athletic
deservedly beat Cambridge
runs in yesterday’s BUS I ■
at Edgbastoo, scoring 250
through fine batting bv
84). - Barlow f4S> and Borr
• S3i. Ca-mbridae lost fnur u .
for 36 and though Edward
Mr Lue seems quite inexhaust- defiant his side were all o
ible these days and the manner 152.
in which he lias mastered three | u \u 250 «9w»rn s*: ?'ivey
Cambridge 152 )Cdw‘?rds 65i.
tolaljy different tj-raes of courses,
Royal Birkdale, Biarritz and now
Elliott & D. J.
all spin is accompanied bv fliaht xr„„ t L v j J
and that the damage to good - 1 ,*^°“ P romised much from
batsmen lies in the combination Lj® of coming in when
of the two. Bedi and Veokat “s answer to five men clustered
exemplified this to . perfection. . HSffow SrSShX'SviS
The corollary of this snoposi- . T „. ,, “T 5 LO J ers -
tion is that hizta-dass bowling of throughout the afternoon
this type can only be successfully batted in his
countered by the confident ose Wick-farted way
of it,. 1 -. while Illingworth, n>ht-
Knott had promised much from
S.' SSFAnS clustered BOLD TURNER
dose was to hop out and hit his *-*'-' *-**-* ^ A.y .1 y JLiX8.
first four through, the covers.. __ _ __
of the feeL not only to move
down the Ditch but also to reduce
the good length margin bv
thrusting the right foot right
forward or bringing the rear foot
right bade.
firmly anchored behind the line,
did his best to provide a stnb-
PUNISHES
GLAMORGAN
up Surrey’s run
WOMEN'S SIM.LES. — Srml-rinnL« :
Mb* P. 5. A. Hasan >U«I M Mrs
D. E. DallOa l \i; r-lMT 5-li. S-6. u-4;
Vfss E. F. Gci-mnna tAustralMi hi
Mis, H. F. Gourl<\ i4u?traliai fi-O. 6-0.
MEN'S DOUBLES. Sr ml- Finals:
K. A. J. He\vi,| <5. Africa) Si R. F.
krldiv «Au.-.irjIiai W A. J. McDnna'd
i K. O. Warwick • AuMraliai 6-4 6-3;
D. Inme & A. Pattlioii iRhcdVeiai bt
J. Mukcrjca iindrsl & S. BaH lAus-
rralldi 9-7. 6-1.
A: Dv-by. .■Nnris 207-9 de.
Randan BO C. Armfshall 4-«i £
l>vrb>-i.-206 iP. Ploirwnrr 4-65] .
iB. Sahadvo 4-52;. Notts wvn
At Nor bury. Kent 2S2 & 84-4. - - •
506 I'M. J. Edward* 96. J. M. I
921. . .
Ai Wnronlar, Warni 226-7 dei '
G'lRilh 64. T. J. Yard!#}- 611 A ..
ID. E. R. Stewart 77.
bora defensive front at the other
end.
i" vi iuxiuk iub rear idol t* . i. __
right back. ^^^-^^Sworth 20 minutes
Fn T gli?h ° cricket h bronlh? e on 5 hv f ^' nE &Sln
* uAMsii am mi. DTineLK on "v nrogrejee
the bad wickets of the later ’50s Qnce or twice he took a lihortv
and perae.tnated now hv over- M 5hLTh?Si SiSs IS5
I>mit cricket bonne battimr and hea^eri^ a-rain^ th- 1 *211
I’Ult enrket nonnB batnng and heaved against the enin f v
the general emobad* on contain- to mid-wfd<et. Occasiona^v' s ff
do no -better th an edge clear
roncentrafo on “nnshing it of 7hp o r short legTTher I waTa '
through. _ horebv lorina all p^e- half chance here when h« "had
By HENRY CALTHORPE
at Portsmouth
^ FINE century fey Turner,
the third of his career,
helped take Hampshire to
291 — 23 short of Glamor-
gan’s 314 for five dec., on
a day which rain shortened
By LANCE TING AY at Eastbourne
tr PHE Inter-County Lawn Tennis Championships end to-
day at Devonshire Park, Eastbourne, with the men
of Surrey holding their heads high, still invincible and
with the championship in
their pockets for the third . The details
successive year. *
Youll Cup
STOWE & UCS
REACH FEVAL
At the other end of the
By CHRISTINA WOOD
Stowe and UCS, both former
winners, will meet in the Pub-
lic Schools L T A Youll Cup
final at Wimbledon today (2
Zur V^hr in three weeks, shows VT r’OMPFTTTIi
I what a well-equipped golfer he is. .%„r* S/PL
Moreover, be played yesterday Randan bo c. ArmlUMii 4-«i &
suffering from a stomach upset »«fc 2 | --206 ip. Pio'WTi'^r 4-65j .
No doubt it accounted for his 4 ’ 51h * ma ' mB
being a mere level par 37 to the *, “li 4 -,
turn, then at the 10th he took 1 Jm £iwllrf * 96 ' J * M ' 1
some pills and promptly came ai wnronur. w«th. 226-7 dei
home in 7.7 Griffith 64. T. J. I urijln 1 611 ft
nome id oj. 6«t. id. e. r. simn 77 .
The torning point was at the suppon _64i. Nortfunts 204-7 a
short 1 1th, I_ thought where he soSSSSSi. ftn-T 223-7 df.
played a curious looking bunker Gabriel 331 . M<ddie»n 167-3
shot left it there, came out none HB Sr“oM Tnabra. wm 20
too close. in three and holed it McDowmi 65 . j. Suvaar 5-357 ft
for a four fA - KnlLdiurran 1171. Lane
1 ‘ u , . ,. - . iE. PIcIchi S 4 » ft 185-3 >T. Hoyt
It gave him a big lift and be A. Kennedy &0 noLV Drawn,
had five birdies in Khe last seven
35 ‘feet fi f5i? h a i Z 0 b a y , Sfffty'B A , JSSPLSP-^Sf.
from a yard at the last w.%. jSS’a^fcNai »i?%
Stlmpson 641. Nortltants 204-7 d
153-7. Drawn.
‘ AI SouHnatc. St**** 223-7 dr*
At Old TroUord. WjirwIiM 20
MrDoHall 65. J. Svvagr 5-3V> ft .
■Ik. i-A. KtlLdwiran 1171, Lana
iE. PIcichi S4> ft 185-3 >T. Hayr
A. Kennedy 60 noli. Drawn.
MINOR COUNTIES
AI Bedford. Soil oU) 236 ft 139-5
«*. H. Jone* SOI. Beds 121 ij. Sti
6-51) ft 1 89 iR. Co* 75. R. E.
n' 1 ' 3-49). SnKWR won by 63.
At bcunlhorpc. Camba o)3-7
ft 169-5 dec. tp. SMppejr 64 k
2ji - 3 dec. IC. Fearnley 66. T. Job
B71 ft 265-5 IG. Robimon 1291. I •
won by 5 wlckeh. { »
Dropped shot
Jackson, on the fringe of the
Ryder Cup side, also hit the ball
El? haJ 5 chance here when he had
«*nce ti " ”1 and lessening the made "in»
play .by 35 minutes. In the
last 50 minutes Glamorgan.
de^ee n f spin!
To maw wavs. th*>u. this wm
8 fascinating gam- frorn pnnWn>r
age, into whMi the nne innfn'»'s
that trxilv fitted wa« TTnoH-’q. Tn
another wav — for the game has
always had its determined
g rafters — so also did that of
Imgwarth. who made a valuable sure,
second-string to Knott in the oae At last an off-break from Venkai
stand of substance in the innings really bit, and yet another short-
. England's hours of travail were ^3 catch saw the end of him.
Pressure on. spinners
Always, however, he was pre-
pared to come forward, two or
three steps if necessary, and the
S inners naturally lost a little of
eir steadiness under the pres-
last 51) minutes Glamorgan
made 40 for no wicket in
their second innings.
- On 41 pitch that so far has
toague -toble the bowmen of m !; P-m.\ “The m^h will ^ tf£
.Nottinghamshire have little left "“grow a iPWctom -t,a»* 7 b . est . of ^ j-u^rs-each pair take his driver. Indeed on the
but to inquire about transport ctw*mr* 2 — gum a. K-m T— hTdu b. P}ajiQg two doubles, with a de- one occasion he went defensive
back to Sherwood Forest. * ,aa ‘ a ,al1 “ BS,l » w * 6 . 1 . | cidina sinvips it npcp<sarv I and took a hvn iron nn i4u» iftvh
won bv 5 wicket*.
_ At Norwich. Bn*
At Norwich. Buck)* 251-6 dec.
Turner . 86». .Norfolk 131-3 cj
Donald *on 65i.
At Sldmouth: Davon 187
Sell'JL 5-491; Berk* 218 (G.
78. P. DuH.rU 6-841 and 81
won by 5 wfcis.
GROUP S iBlldlel?b
wW n a su?ic D r , s. m i- N -
reckoning that the defeat of their
' l Z. held no well Md after Ha™ women 'the day before. WaS c ^*5“ i-
the 3S?P La liw wort *y of Vicarious revenge, beat- fcora "‘ Ui 7 - d 3 .
Of Sfer? d FnJ rt ?n th T»r^? Middlesex forthrightly. No side WOMEN-
0 wickets for 20, Turner and can win without strength in depth -
tiding singies il necessary. and took a two iron on the. 14th
Vesterdd>« semi-finals were ***• dropped a shot
quite straightforward. Stowe beat
wS t fA ucs < ‘ rfe - ,le ' 1 atlant
ATLANTIC WEATHER MAP
The only dose match was that
in which Stowe's second pair.
. England's hours of travail were leg catch saw the end of him. Turner has looked full of
ushered in directly after 12 o’clock Knott made 67 out of 100 while be promise since he played his first
when Boycott, after making three was in, in two hours 10 miuates, sizeable innings for Hampshire —
cautious singles, was caught be- .and it is enough to say that Leslie he made 87 against Middlesex on
hind from one of Abid Alfs out- Ames, his famous predecessor, this ground in 1967. This year he
swingers. could not have played a. better has only recently come into the
Unbeaten since 1969
_. . . - . , Notts 5. Him S iuflSn.1— XvK* 6. Wilis
They have not been beaten at 3 — Ostoo 5 . H«ru * — ware* 6. B»rh* a.
Abid All's gentle pace is made i n Sffl B Si
to seem even more romfortable . T? e game went rather mto the petent innings.
side, but this was a highly com-
Eastbourne since the last day of r , group 1 iWrybriagtri. — peruy, s
the championships in 1969 and Northumberland
yesterday there was excitement group 5 iFrioton; s. wans a.
yesieraay mere was excitement group 5 iFrioton; s. wales a.
in their opener against Middle- tay* 1 jr9L ortoik s - scauami 2 I'boih
by the fact of his walking back doldrums with Illingworth and He showed . a wide range of
sex when for the first time this
week they were in" danger of No K'
losing a set.
This was against John Barrett
6 . Sumirwt o.
GROUP 7 1 Cheltenham!. — Salop 7 . «.
N. Wales. 2— Beds 9, WrsLmorlflad 0— -
However, from behind the arm
this looked a difficult ball that
started on the : off-stump and
moved away late.
horribly sore finger. forear
Illingworth was out at 183, just fours,
as Amiss had been, the seventh
man to be caught within a few
yards of the baL Hutton and
forearms and in - all- he hit 14
and Chris Bovett, the Middlesex n. Scotland 7 . Hereford 2 .
Lnckhurst opens np Snow now added 40, mostly
_ r r by Snow. Hutton was m
Edrich is seldom a robust be- barracked, and showed hir
sinner and it, was perhaps during more susceptible than his fs
his partnership with Lnckhurst when he swung across- the
that the Indian attack was allowed and was bowled.
!£„fi.£f- elop its rhythm rad With Gifford jnst about l
confidence. i„g on Snow approached hi-
Luckhurst, who after his “pair’’ and survived a leg-slip chant
at Headinglev _faad stroked bis 46 when, after 1 12 o 1
first balj streaking past cover for Wadekar took the new balL
.5f ori 5£ ? od Snow finally got there to
rtS! iS?? tn £ ™ bve st ^ ok ? s delight of a swarm oF Uttle
that were to be seen. whose mass inV asion of the 1
However, when he bad made 30 poses yet another problc
out 01 46 in nearly an hour and a though one with its welc
naif Luochurst was picked up aspect of misplaced keenni
nicely off bat-pad at short-leg, for established authority.
Sensible .stand
After Stephenson, the night
Snow now added 40, mostly hit
by Snow. Hutton was mildly th!
barracked, and showed himself
more susceptible than his father “* Bj®"' ^SSS
and' “wl? aCrOSS “ ,e ^ 5SS!®£ cridk&S^gle^ed LI
ai w-rt[ aS r'-ff ^ t K * v _ runs diligently,- .while Turner was
expansive in his stroke play,
mg on. Snow approached his 50. - . . 1. .
and survived a leg-slip chance at- _Arter 5alnshury_ had. driven
ace at-| After Sainshnry had driven
overs, 1 Shepherd to mid-wicket, Marshall
1 hit seven fluent fours in his 37.
Snow finally got there to the: Turaer accelerated. He
oierEt <»f a cwirni nF tjh-Io hn^c reached his 300 when he forced
delight of. a swarm oF Uttle boys ™ ..OT"
whose mass invasion of the pitch /
poses yet another problem— !“« “tgrval and a stoppage
though one with its welcome for - He was &en stumped
aspect of misplaced keenness — swinging at Walker. The later
batsmen bad little success.
NOTTS TAKE FIRM GRIP
By D. J. RUTNAGUR at Worksop
GLAMORGAN — Flrat InulmTs: 314-9
dec. IFradrrlclus 70- Lewis 68 . Walker
68 . Lyons sa noti.
Second Innings
their invincibility through
another day, making their tally
29 winning rubbers in succession.
In the last rubber of the day the
Middlesex second strings. Beg
Bennett and Alan Jones, did at
last steal a set, the Surrey pair
winning 4-6, B-7, 6-4. this being
the greatest pressure they had
undergone this week.
The women's championship
then lost their concentration and
fell away to Iove-o in the second
set.
They recovered to 3->5. but could
not save the set and were hard-
pressed in the third before win-
ning by 6-1. 56. 64.
" The most'extiting match was'in
the quarter-finals, in which Brad-
field put out the holders. Eton.
2-1. aftpr a deciding singles and
aFter the doubles, boih long
three-setters, had been shared.
OUARTF.R-FrNMS. Sln«, T br Fpl-
Md 2-0; Bra dr If Id fjf Elon 2-1: UCS b?
S**I , HmII^ 2-0: Wlndhevter bl Latrmrr i
U^prr 2-0.
_ SEMI-FINALS. — S*»iwc M
2 - 0 ; UCS hi Wlnch-ilrr 2 - 0 .
School x Cricket
bubbled yesterday, every one of
the matches balancing at three
rubbers all. In the end Middlesex
lost their unbeaten record when
Warwickshire, without a previous
win, beat them 54.
GREY ASSAULT
JUST FAILS
SITUATION AT NOON, JULY 22
By A Special Correspondent
at Taunton
f«°” ,** ’ u ‘ tl lleM * at constant pressure. Lot •*
, U l!l *"H"g east-south-east and deepen. Low “ E
Two well-timed declarations
Devonshire were slsr, broeehr . Uftf Ut21. n, H,??!5„Ji
ucvuusuire were aiau oronsnr ,l,_ u„, , l„ r . -r ,
down for the first time when Sur- between the English
rey. licking the wounds thev suf- , scboolc at Taunton.
r A _.J _ !^_L J Jl _ Wh All W 1 lac m n ri f ri •■■■ail r^vlt
fered against Middlesex on When Wales’s eighth wicket Fell
*™"5 ea*'-*ouih-east and deepen. Low “ E „ "
will deepen a little and move east. Low ” M ” ivill nun ' l y
north, deepening. High » C » unlf relmin ^
unchanged. >f *t f
BRITISH ISLES l WORLD CONDITIOr^
Wednesday, came back with spirit with the last ball of the dav.
»d snatch another 54 win. Kent the scores were le'el and a good
beat Yorkshire by the same dose match ended in a draw.
FORECAST FOR
NOON, JULY 23
Exrres mb 2>
NT 0TTING HAMS HIRE established a firm grip over
Middlesex, the current leaders, at the Town Ground
yesterday, bowling them out for 219 then adding 67 for two
, ■* t0 t ^ ieir fi rs t innings lead
The scoreboard of 12 o*
NOTTS — Flnt lnslnss: 339 (Sober*
78. Harris 62).
tvs . nr , Tola] iao wfctl 40
JR at Worksop h.\mfshire— F i«t imum
led a firm grip over » t' «
lers, at the Town Ground jg. k. s?ep&uaaii. b^wniu™"”;;" i
>19 then adding 67 for two D ’ R ‘ Turccr ' ‘ l E w - i°“v,i ker ...iT 5
l their first innings lead g: I: JKSSSSw?.
At one stage. In fact, there Zm R ' Worre11 - c E - w - , gSa H , b s I
as a slight chance of Middle- P- K- ro ,K 2 - e * b c or <re 1" « 1
Paish, whose short serves
floored Barrett.
The Welsh had carried their
Ajejers s 84 29 Lisbon c 7
r 68 20 Locarno f l
Athens c 77 25 London f 7 - -
SEF* 1 "* S 79 28 Lnwnbnf /H , 1
For Middlesex the oolv un- mernicht first-innings score to
Madrid s §.
RpJ^nrla F S! S S 2
Rbrlfn ** e f IS , 4 aT aga - S 3
Rlarrii, t 5® J? Malta S fl
“4 Manchstr c fr
c 55 Montreal s 7,
Rn/eeilc f SJ MOSCOW C 6
Brussel' r 79 38 Munich F 7
rSSBr * f IS V- Nwile, f 7
c .ra 17 N. York s O'
Copnhgn f TO 17 Nice s 7;
Dublin c 63 17 Nicosia s »'
Edinbrgh r 52 1] Oslo f K
Faro s 77 25 -Paris fa
Florence f 79 28 Prague f 7 ?
I Funchal s 70 21 Reykjvk c 5!
Geneva a 72 22 Rome s 7 :-
fiibrallar s B 3 31 Sbckhlm th 6
Glasgow r 52 11 Tel Aviv f R 1
Guernsey c 81- IB Tunis « a
Helsinki F63 20 Valencia s K
l.o.Man c 61 16 Venice r 7*'
Innsbrcfc c 73 25 Vienna s T.
Istanbul r 72 22 Warsaw f 71
fiSE-iSS & ^
C — cloudv; ■ — sunnv:
beaten women's pair. Shlricv
Brasher and Glvuis Coles. 17.
Madrid
Majorca
leaders, and Crump and Paish
eventually won 6-1, 12-10.
They, saved three set balls in
all, one at 5-6 in the second set.
197 before declaring, giving Eng-
land a lead of 40 runs. StovoM
again kept their immaculate and Butcher hit nut to give Enq-
recoro. land a good serond-innings start.
AH this neck-and-ncck stuff left I which w.«s dcclan-d at "US fur
the title prosoects complicated, three uller 90 mmuics.
fjT' ^ U T he current situation is Surrey Wales had to store 15R runs at
tec ^i* f h r ee wins. 22 rubbers: Devon 3-21; five runs an over and Crev was
Vrifh y kvo ai femrfr» er winiMipc PGr ^ Middlesex 3-19: Yorkshire 1-17: the strensth of their battinz. His
with two service winners. Kent 1-15; Warwicks 1-14. 71 included. 12 fours and ,on>
came sfcadilv ai the rciuii 1 : 1 ]
Second Innings
M. J. Harris, not aqt
G. Prase, c Radley, b Tltrara ..
M, J Smedlay. c Radley,
b FeatBerslone
70. A. Fullan. not out ... —
Extra tlb 1 »
was a slight chance of Middle- P- fif- w*i% e * b c S r®e 1" 4
sex being made to follow on. iSii^ab®*. nb'S l
They baa slumped from 166 for rrr
as They hatf slumped from 166 for
four to 185 for eight during the
ig last half hour beFore tea.
Actually there were such short
second serves that Barrett all
but fell on his face trying to
f B3 17 Nice
c 63 17 Nicosia
TORBAY INR T'MENT iT.inju.iyt. — rate. When it Lamp tn fh»» final
Boy. Under- 18 Stnilec. Semi-Mnab: I, * w ' , ' “
noy. umtr-JB oraiira. nmi-imaa: 1 , p ..... ui.i., _u;u . , .
Smith, 1 York <.1 bl C Mnbfiutr iPnnm ° w uj w SC,n , neede d 5L\ runs
~kk 0IV r
Total' 291
. Fall or vrteketa: 1-8. 3-30. S-16«,
«-234. 3-243. 6-255. 7-367. B^276i
■ . , - — » . _ •■■ 111*11 1 iui u ■ v 1*1 riunui 1 'iirrnni , , . . a i uii
reach up court to connect with g- 2 , 3 - 6. 10 - 3 . mrn un-i-r-is sunic*. and had three wickets in hand
the hall Cotintv WppIc ic Full Srntl-rinals: N. Dwyrr iDcvoni bt A. .... . . noun.
-k-E. eK 15 ruij Ctv >Dcvnni 2-6 R-2. 6-1: S. BrrtVr ENGL VVD SCHOOLS — Flr.t | nnln -,.
OF SUCh CuriOUS sbot5. iDwoni bt N. < 5 *iitnr iDi-v 4 -.ni h -0 6-4. 4 d' il. « U. Miller 79 qui dui
Cramn ffett little tmvclace l-> u ,o . O'*™ Jnr CliMilpo. B««y Undrr-IB A. Pug? t.lJ. ^
P t 7 ■ iUt e lawn sHrniii*. 8 em|.nn»l<: C. M.ibbnrt iPIv. i nn iitT
tennis.. It is remarkable w-hat m 2 u,h l w i. Thomas .iPi>mv>uti>> «--j A . stuvnia. h n..
T«t*l (2 wttsi
Fall Ol wickets: 1-30. 2-63.
MIDDLESEX' — First Innings
W. B. Rtmell. c ft b Eorbas ....
M. J, Smith, b .
P. H. Parfltt, st Pollan, b White
C. T. Radley, c Pollan, b Forbes
N, G. Feathereiono. b White
T Selwood. lbw. b Biead
C. J. R. Black, b WWte
W . X. Murray, lbw. b Stead
V Innac nrtt Mlf
K. V. Jone«. not out .......
H. C. Labchman. run out
if. j. Tltmus. c pull an. b Harris
Extras Ot 4- lb 5. tib 3) ...
s The mornings cricket was keen . .Bowiioa: Xj-.a 19 5 - 3 - 53 - 3 : cohi*
T? and absorbing, erven if the scor- b?ra '-3 j-ss-V- w^fkrr 1 i &
mg rate was limited to just over 6 - 0 - 2 S-O: Frederick! s-o/jml 8 ’ **
two runs an over The atmos- tsmas va.: mats 6. Gimona, 7 .
Phere, as OH Wednesday, was Umpire*: C. Cook ft 3. Laagrldoa.
5 dense, once more making for the
-jj new ball to move about in the .
61 air. _
Carlton Forbes, who was __ ^ jf l • ,
1 released by Notts last season. W Akl Mtt fE t H 1 B
?| has been recalled as a casual . f J. tA/LIL
0 performer after some doughty '
13 deeds in the Lancashire League. Tomr
a hish cfanHa'ri nf ha I S*nu iTnrfjuayl bt C. Ka*>ki<w
01 J drae , Q ® iTornueyi 6-2. 6-2 Girl. Undrr-18
maintains, and one wonders what
Surrey would do without him.
Crump and Paish maintained
5lnq‘>~i. Srinl-Hnals: N. Divjrr rpiy-
ww Mil bl N. S.iltrr iPihnlnnl 6-3. fi-4:
S. H^rk-r 'TntqiiMi bt A. Cac tPl».
mouihl 3-6. 10-8
A. Pug? MJ. HW ‘ DU '-
Secnnil lnnlni«
*. S'utf.ild, b Ri< ti iriit . t,
A. Bulrttpr. st ftnMmny. h Eylra”; -
4. D)f tiiini.r, b l(i.l;.iri|> I?
A. Page, noi oui , .
Extras ■>, lb -li i
m
front;
OCCUJOED FRONT — 1 — .
:lrf-
s 7ijT
it*'--
Pranue f 7 :
Reykjvk c 5:
Tunis b ol
Valencia s ft:,
Venice T 7?
Vienna s 7:
Warsaw f 71 ^
1
f 7l\. ? JG0
i 7T, Dsi:
Young Tail looks impressive with 47 TT J
Tnlal I., \i 1 1 ,. d«' i ... | ja
Full nl ivfckrl. 1-56. 2-32. "ij-t Tfl.
Dowiinn ; niM|||.v..|nuc - x.n. 1 4 _o
■jni.-. 4-0-2S-0. r nti-irds g.n.siS:
■ Hfir> 6-I-2b-ll. I . -n- , —
. i n Fahrenheit. The * C1 ]unch hme gerterallv.
S-I-2b-i». t si, s 1 -2-0-1 -I !
WALLS -I vr,( luntogx
-?3V lk ‘!f lc ^ pcratu . re ‘n Centi-
. ,s . Jftven aloncside in
ToteJ ai 9 He got Notts the valuable wickets
Fall of wickets: 1-4.- 3-64. 5-69.
4-84. 5-166. 6-174, -7-775. 8-1E3.
9-314- _ ’ _ .
Bowllny; Etead SES
16-7-3 l-o; Taylor g >b ’ r C*
9-5-33-0: While 26-8-56-5: Harnl
5-4-2-23-1.
5-69. of Smith, who was bowled plav-
8-iEs. i n g across, and Bussell— caught
Forbes and bowled. White spun one
sobers past Parfitt to have him stumped.
Banna pis: Notts 7. Middlesex 5..
Umpires; D. G. L Evana A C: G.
Pepper.
AUSTRALIA MAKE
NO-BALL CHANGE
Morning casualties
These were Middlesex's pre-
lunch casualties- Early in the
afternoon, Forbes had Radiey
caught at the wicket From 64
for- four, Middlesex went lo 16B
for five, thanks to Featberstone
and 5elwood.
By JOHN MASON
at Northampton
TTAVING applied pressure
for a couple of hours
when batting- in their
second innings, North-
amptonshire hesitated for a
period shortly after tea
against Warwickshire at
Northampton yesterday.
wicks hire to remain on similar
terms in runs and bonus points
though wickets fell frequently
For three hours be was the
buffer which Swinburne's offs pin
and Sarfraz's occasional bharp-
ness did little to disturb. Af> they
were always making progress at
the other end, Northamptonshire
got five bowling points.
The scoreboard
'■ 1 c n-'.ith,' b ILirMna
D> Vllfliirij. »iiir
K- pvi^’I d ClirMuu b'nn.i'li
”■ ■■ A'l vm. RM Mill
D. TTlirPll.iw. b RxmIPi
j;^ S a™ s W . Ji WEATHER FROiV ■ > ’
fl-iniKS ,i" d Si: - -
J Rnli.ti.U . n.it .nn
I. I.IIP. Ihir. k *>i.i. hiiiiinn” ’.
F.xir.w ib lb ft. „h
Hustled along
. Smith dealt a lot in the dcflec-
NORTHANTS — First Inning; 241
i Mu-llljq b2. Idll 34. Conk So; Ib-ldulla
5-461,
Second Innln'T-
M. '1. Vkc:«jn. c Timnn. b
Mc\ icknr 4
' Urn. :-i Timin', b Glbbi .... 41
13 S WOfflr r G.Ilhi l> MiVIclcr
S1u.nt.iq Muh.rnnnjd. Kin. b Hih IuIIj ;,i
o t-ngk. not out
4 . ?f. 1 'V. r 1 " itn ‘ 2 ' 101
Rnulln., . l 'R..,.,| t ‘ * j„.
G.if'l.iii, g.4-28.n
!5I- .ift S: n I, " 3-1-28.0. VI, II,:
Rtf kl|i'i> r 'O- ■ h.!i ‘
4-o-u-O. Si-ifiioiiuni S-n-13-l. " ^ ul ' , '' 1
By BAY ROBINSON {fie spinners In quest of batting
A new law for Australia. ^adcPed S|Vp««
differing, drastically from the S the vrickl
International Gncket Loiirer- Th • j e ^ batting points
ence's bowling rule IS being cauS ed wickets to fall. White,
for five, thanks to reamers rone Progress, once very brisk. . 5mith dealt a lot in the dcflec-
and 5elwood. eased. The ibw dismissal of t,on , a °d prod. He drove less than
Once established, Featberstone Mushtaq, unfortunate in that he u ? ua ^ ,r u ^ ***11 hustled partners
assumed the role of the cavalier app eared to hit the ball, had hL 0 r n „ 3 - vf:i w *S n 0 ^ he 'V cke j s - s «[*“-
pulling, drivuag and sweeping an effect for he was eain>r w^II ? ur ? e ». Via edse or pad or bat,
Sie spinneni lnW of batting ^ ^8^ ft Or w boti ' J™
KS^adiPeS EfcVM « « by 201. “ “
■B. 5. c Gortir.'n ' ' b' ikjil'uil.i o
bauioi. nm ulll . . .1,
LaIioj ib4. Ib 6. nb 2i .... 12
Or both, cot him ultimately.
7 OUI >5 Hrkl»i 202
«-j K. tl«6^ rt,: 2 - 77 - 5 ' 115
WARWlLKbHIKfi— t'Jm InnJuciB
T. Jl lull h. i:*-' . Im. b b.inra^ . .41
R .libbcrlrv. c Jribivton. b Lor ... 5
A - Gorduq. l Muthreq, b b.irir.i: ... 17
Si 1 ! rimf 1 11 mn is
J- [' r j_ rr ' run mif
.V . 2^111 m. m* 1 nm '
n Juthoiif h .
I, J,*i°nw .. h nuif firr
n f P-"' 11 H 11 .Mll
II. Ilurili-s.jniii-. mrt run
. - A VMniw. rim nut . ‘
K. Vl.ivii-i.. h Rnlr.hrr
C. Jiilf. b RijiriiMr
E^'rus «b4. lb a Jii
fsONDON READINGS /or
( tjt?' 7 p m - i0 7 a m - ^
77? I ^ X o^ m r 0 1I 7 A;®- 10 7 P-m. Sun
',,in'r 7 i Ra'nTall: A trace. Sun- *•■*•
n r h, ' urs - iriteoa i.a
wi? m U"r i V o St n c ^ ES3B i:i
Unniin i London Wpathcr Ciiciim 7.0
London Airoort, Catwirk £" u!hro 4 7.5
, H™ ck , ' h ?T " F l ¥- c,: r ^'^t 1:5
• .ri »,CK. r,la« 2 nw AiroorL F.tb. „ ..
TEE RESORTS ;
Ior 24 * our » to fi 1
_ Mdt. .
•i"'® uiiw. we
•ns. F c Id
*■ c 1 ? ■* 1 _
- 'in
1 il as ^
65 IS aw
M IB SiBrt
I '»• »fia52nw AirnorL Esk. o . ,
I »^Qi» Wrath 52P g®
» nr I;
0 •Siins.
Wettest. Ackl’inaton jV'.7 IS
Sunniest. Stornaway ‘i f r !?
14-9 hours.
tVnrihhiB
Rugaar R
Sou;tiAca
9*iaaK':n
Bfju'tjcmrti
Ull -B
70 21 'HBg
11% fg
63 CM W
71 22- ®
70 2 1 Q3
Tnl.ll |K n|,t,t ..
orthants, with five wickets iu A na!n a.? I \ ;m. j. k. smiii..' * i, q >5.?h,7 r " l r - ^ 4 , r rt' S , l A te, f»v -.'-a-', a-eo. ?J .,
,od still lead by 201. Warwicks, down 8-7 oo bonus l- wwm 1 . c Mu^un. b 5 jn r ,« iS * b '■**• 7 - 14 -- 8 - 133 .
[ ' . Q J . points, led by one run on the first fr ibw. t. s.vjnb ..™ 0 i„ "■'i’"’ is-i-64-i: Miin-ra.i,
If the bloom of youth this time innings and quickly had Ackerman ji Tv '- 4 : 22 V. " 4 n L ‘ 0 0 '
p L S m M, tin ’« 9-33 tSSSP = gji gj
P;W- to 4AZ a.w Stm tvrymouth 5 "9 SI 19 M
n s : i h if i"
o.m. Hirh wa t c ^ n, ; t . se f ^
rxr»&*.
(30ft): 1** U ' - li OT ^» a o a - 1B - Unii^lHS n
_ . . P-«. (20.9R). a;
— Hinchnoal 4 .
HILL CLIMB Cohjnra 1 Buy 2 .'
nrt" 6 nRITIAH CH-SMIP **\l£*V° ] j
takes precedence over ,agc, it is caught a second time by Timms,
partly because of the difficulty of TalL equally quickly, aired bis
writing originally about Mike strokes, once sava^elv straare cut-
in traduced to control bowlers* § 0W Ur, K intelligently and accur- writing originally about Mike strokes, once savagely square cut
foot Tliramnat. The Board of a«Ty7feiiov7d E | e ath e r S toi.e i and Snith and partly bacaaae Ta.t tm S for four.
r'.-t — 7 rvnhRp.d all Ri?«~Lr fuming 012 fresh who w_is not born ben Smith There were nthpr bnuiv
to. h. V. Timms, h Sjrir *r
S. J- Rw. c b.irlr,'/. b 5\\iirtvurnr- 14
R. GIWis. Uni nut 4
Litr.iB Ib IQ, nb 4 1 14
iS'S nVirw. Toliil
TODAY'S CRICKET
I nrd’* ill ..n.f, I u-ilrt nil v i.
j.i o.os 70 at rajoti ,
2-3 g-H 70 31 .Clou 4
for a ninert^ &
rLMiinuili >[| t.i 4 „in ...
'Iilfr v GI.minr.Mn U J •
StatM tn iiidtfe no-bails by back for a new spell, accouaren ror nrst p — danes in his 47 and Mmugh Cibbs. 9-: -=. " —
Mates to juage no- ai y Selwood and Murray. However, serves it asst.eterf by Timm?, fooled him in nonting: tre 20.2 m. 2 ; cram,,
foot placement, wfao ran 0Ut of partners Both provided charade- and the finish, one had in be impressed ^ 5 . i.Va.o. ? " s*mSurJ;
Umoires must use the marker wbetJ 23 , and Latch man removed pnr pase to the cricket, and in bv the fourth first-class in nines of us-ww.
to adjust a bowler’s Uk^off to lh B e dark prospect of a follow on. J^delv differing wavs. Smith. ^ * f-v-ar<,ld, who scored 54 an «*.: Korm n. ".r-vin, 1 .
keep him from landing beyond „ - — """ eighth out at 222. allowed War- Wednesday L-mri m.. j. Am oii a r. awimii.
the popping-crease. * f wlokclkepper ----- — jr ^TIM
N , .,.h„ n .n , „„ .n i ;, , - J . 50 ut 6lJ Nort)i _
D-.rl.Miti ll|..-l..-,l| .„ ft,. X..H- „
t .5> n .'‘J r -Mwlwn ■
h ''Ml ■> I* \X ■ ■ 1 1 |. iii ,
Ml-hHr-ft * 1 % "
. captoip t wiokctketper
L'mcrinn . J. Arnold ft R. A-.ptn.tll.
M,.|.|lr.. , SontlHMl.
. .* r»nn\irl. v„ P
i;«rt ! Gu ' h " Sih: Uar^.i y
S n n "ST 69 2J RtP* V.
v-o 0.01 69 31 BaUi . . -:lv %
ninckDDoi 4 !?
Siiuiliport 4.6
CoKvvn Enj 2 . 1 .
Liamaudno 1 .4
knnleKe y j
P.' -ni-i vr i m, j p - _ L, n-
42 P 19. 1 T‘'"'’ <M cLaren-Chev m' io Bi
4nnl^>.eir
VwMlf
Sff.Ily K.
Hntlwl
1 0.7
& ornoivay ]4.9
A bend con 10.4
Leumon — .
\: 4 n ’
— 64 is Drr~* i «. r,
— 70 21 CW 5 . Rj ,.* 1
— 73 23 DCT
— 70 31 C 4 0* Il 1 - .«
— 70 ai Dry, !* i *
— 69 21 Dry V‘ T 'aa
JO 3i Dry 'V, v,
0-41 19 ^
0411 68 ao «mS |i'J l, .-s
6.0 o.fil
QI 0.04
■JM 53 11 Suw
■04 55 15 Sunn '
— ■ 57 1 4 Sun'-
— 57 U iuiffl,
“ fiS IG Dry •
I ts ^ &muteur Golf Championship |j
' -)UIN T <i PUTT ROUTIS llC"
' e «i;
! ’u t .
ARKS: HUMPHREYS
YLY SEED LEFT
l ®y LEONARD CR.4. IV LEY at Burnham
TER some excellent golf and many close
matches, eight good players reached the
ter-finals of the English Amateur Close
( ipionship at Burnham yesterday, when
rey Marks, one of the two remaining
i in the fifth round, was beaten 7 and 6 by
Putt (Frilford Heath), who is 19.
i the first match this morning David Harrison
ham) will meet Peter Moody (Notts), followed by
n Humphreys (Royal Mid-Surrey), the only seed
tgainst Peter Benka ;
■H
Women's International Tournament
Miss Oxley set for
outright victory
By ENID WILSON al Worplegdon
J)INAH OXLEY and Diane Frearson meet today over
36 holes at Worplesdon in the final of -the Wills
women’s international match play tournament which Miss
Oxley has won for the past .
The _ Dailg _ Telegraph* prtdkg, Julg S3, 19! 1 27
nstonl. Putt meets &d *‘ n S taken five at the first
* TJ m 7 Tu ?° d F ° Ur 31 the Sh0rt *** tO
r Homer (Walsall j tu;a one up.
>hn Dickinson (Hind- iStf SSVfi
plays John Davies fen'^ “n°£
LCgdaleJ. holes against the wind and wa 5
_ three under par when he finished
doubtful whether there his (nan.
■een a better or a • Tfi? re wa t ■ surprising result
*r last pipht in , Die *J? e ,n which Putt beat
. last ei&nt in this Geoffrey Marks, or Treatbam. a
lonship and there are member of this rears Walker
cts of many good Cup s5,ie -
is to come. ' Bnt Pu tt was in dazzling form
■ . . . . , , and reached Lhe turn in 32. -iv-
overmgnt rain had once Lag his adversary no chance. He
tamed the rather fiery continued 54-4 tn win by 7 and 6
s and 3 west to south- K'ith a score of approximately
ind yesterday made the slx unrier P*r.
,g holes more formidable Benka beat Steven Holley
if ore. ■ [Pnoenivi bv dint of good put tin?
if not by particularly poori shot-
irnhrovc' voettnned rad k ing. and John Dickinson. a
^mpnreys reSjKlllse Kood golfer, beat Stpven Bull, of
aost important match' nf Vh/'lnH °? 8* n St green l0 " ,ards
:rnoon was that in which "** end of , ** e £ay.
eys beat John Fisher. 29, Finally, John Davies beat John
lldnds amateur champion, Cobbett of Hayling by 3 and 2.
ioine. This was the first Daves, on his own admission,
is week that Humphreys w 1 ? 1 P Ja 5'i n S well but got hi-
fi n messed and he was Wlt ° PiS S°°d short game.
like his best at the FOURTH ROUND
stages of the match. Sc , d<l5
r n pH nno artH w n c h.»ji W » HUMPHREYS (R Ml4~6unfyl M C.
rnea one up ua was two d. bii-j tKin ?*\* oodi a & 7.
toe 11th, where he holed J- H^rriMm ■st.io*hami w j, ^
(ill ffti* hirdlp ,tCirl>ijQ Bsv' 5 A 4.
„ * ?u a "H” u r r e> L - M. Sfttfth IN . Hants* D» C. E.
Won the ne.it two boles Wuodfonl i.&d'linyion Palmei 19th.
! bp wind With sunerb P '_J- Hedies (Lftmifey Pki bl M. J.
Neither 'played tle XVi •K“«iSW“!Ri:4, i * D.
ell and the bole was . 'CJientesler, 3 & 2.
in fnni" j- A. Fisher lH»rborns» bt D. M. A.
rn rour. Steel ificirtiMlli 1 hole.
■ unn tha lfifh > **■ J- Bfanka (AddlmioDl bt N. R. W.
MOU the iota Wlta s Luc,, ,H,rlwrnn 5 A 4.
three, holing from 10ft, s. Roa* y iphocnixi bt x. sbim ia.,ek-
^ h, .' e ^e 0ne M d A 0W | i and VtSfr .Tr.ntb.ni, bt R.
plclji hit a NO. 2 iron C?mpvrm iQ><yDn9i 1 holp.
•rlative quality 6ft from J - "JJ iFrnrord HreMu br R. l. Glad-ae
_ __j .Addington Pal.eei 1 bole.
e and made a two to t. w. h. Homrr rweisi-ii bt a. j. hui
the match at the 17th. tBurnjam & Bmowi 2*1.
, . , , „ M. 8 . B. LudI iMoseinjj bt B. C. Steer
•. who had played so well _ rr-»ist.AU . * 3.
duck-hooked his drive s ' (Aattagei^V" hole 1 A ‘ J ‘ Hov “ rt
\o*h and Humphreys won J. s. mrvtnHa tuinaiey vein m g. j.
itin^lp hnla J-fp mprifr MVl 1 |i|jH ,
5°, ’ " c wVnfo J- G - cobhm bt a. Thin-
'eiikd, a former WaJlcer mu iGoBrortiu 3 a ?.
iyer, fh |fi morning. J - (t P^} bl u# Ashby
” Wk r -I ustj 1UDUC LUC
holes more formidable
’ciiAQf a it'i uiwi r
i.ver, this morning.
Moody through fifth round
* Merrlpon bt Smith 3 it 2.
Moody continued play- •JMWW.Kftf*, 4 ,! 1 . 3 -
ucdly and beat Peter Humphreys hi FUber i bole.
who reached the semi- ffaiw hi rdii.y * s 3.
st vear and played For gSffBSl^ M».t? i hole.
Moody was out m 54. d«.iv si coWm-k 3 a 3.
John Putt, of Frilford
Heath, who beat the
seeded Geoffrey Marks
(Trentham) 7 and 6.
Under*23 Tournamen t
VAUGHAN, 218
EDGES TO
VICTORY
By A Special Correspondent
at Royal Lytham
T)AVID VAUGHAN, of
Royal Liverpool, yes-
terday won the £1,750
Under - 23 professional
tournament at Royal
Lytham St Annes, with a
54-hole total of 21&— five
over par.
Bui Vaughan, who went inlo
thp final round wilh a four-
strokes lead, finally finished only
a stroke in front of John
O'Learv. of Foxrock. the Irish
international, and Noel Hunt, or
Fairfield.
Vaughan seemed In have de-
stroyed his chances when he lost
eight strokes in six holes from
the seventh, but steadied himself
with birdies at the 13th and 14th.
His only mistake over the closing
boles ' ame at the I7th. whehre
he failed to hit the green, but
saved the day with a safe four
at the final hole.
LEADING SCORES
218 — U, I. ikiiDhan (R»l Lmrpnnl AO,
70. 70 IE300I.
219 — N. C Hum .Fn.rfirTrti 74. 7*. 11:
J. O'Lrnn »Fn*jTK-M 13. 74. 75 iIMO
Mrbl
271 — G. W. TownhID .Hull' 75. 72. 14
(£11 ji.
225 — C. o. Bak-r tntrt Sola \4m,ri 72.
75: T». Inijnr 1 Sbbnn.ir, 72.
224 — r. K. Hrrh-r, 1 Ur.-n-iji-n * C11.I
7?>. 7<*. O. J. R41t| iFulwMIl IS. 19.
223— F. Tbompban imr-”-i< § 2. 82
225 — 5. N. Phillip. -!r. Hrri-> 77. 73,
227— 5. J. Lrimmnrr 1 Hxtllrj W.unJ.
73. 72; P. CD.vnn iHal’an.-hirei 75. 76:
K. F. Rotaon iHarprnarn, 76. 77:
N. R. BUhn'II iTr<-va«S) 76. 76: A R.
iMaldrm 79. 75.
228 — n. oaralaa • R~|ml Pki 77. 81.
229 — •. Ei«k ,71oMl4nd>- r«..i 75. 77:
R Wynn (Eral h"r»iPiid 1 75. 79; J. T.
B««r4 iNuirniciiii SO. 7-i. E. P. Stfll-
Vtell irrmvhjm Hnrall 74. 79: T. }
Hard IBriMittlnnrt 79. 7j: S. M»*
Cninhr iill<-hpi>n4i 79. 76: H. EJIb>
il>rhom Pkl 78. 77.
230 — M. Wclnnn iRl<ii>\<ch) 74. 80.
tivo years. I POVALL BEATEN
If she wins today. Miss Oxlcv
will become permanent holder ON T^AST 1 fiRFFiV
of the trophy— the Wills Chak VrrVH,Il,IN
lengc Salver. Three members of the Welsh
Fr^.rson fe f s»rS g*L .«« ?■ E “^
Two years ago, she met Miss learn championship n
Oxley over this course in the final
of the county championship, with
pean team championship in
Lausanne last month were eli-
minated in yesterday's third and
Miss Oxley winning a close con- fourth round oF the Welsh Ama-
tesL teur championship at Southern-
Mrs Frearson has ‘held the down.
British Girls’ title and been . {* surprise defeat was that of
runner-up in the 1 British cham- Povai), twice winner of the
g iooship. She has played for the title. - who kwt on the last green
ritish Isles on several occasions. a member of the
Whatever advantage in length V 88 l a t er
Miss Oxley has had over her rival cl rm mated in the fourth round
this week has been neotralised Richards, mnner-up in
hy the bone-hard fflirwavs. The ... '* , „ __
one club that enabled her to keep E./n- . AbeiArw 7 S^M^cf'SUSrHf
going was her putter. ‘f-iliVJl .•* G -. «- •Mmmsun a
Joan Piper imoroved with tMwmu'ii £«ni i.t 5 f. m.' H^dtfo5 il io^
every round until she met Miss 'Rulriw-iii u
. Oxley in the semi-finals and then
the importance of the occasinn
imposed an unaccustomed strain.
But tn her great credit she stayed
with Miss Oxley to the torn.
They both played the short 10th
over the pnnd perfectly. Miss
0\le.v holed a long putt at the
The details
iriiwn in n«lt*b
k. H. C. Richard, iSoulhirndimol 20«h;
5- a 9 r lSoo«i6j-nUaw.n) bt A. D. O.
Rr*» (CHccietni 7 A t>.
M. e. D. AdaoM rl.ianir l,am 1 bi t. A.
Duncan «SauHiPrndnwn) 5 A 1; A. P.
Grt/IIMia lOwmin bt J. L. tn>a lfUd>r>
1 Mr; S. Coi iWrnvo* Cmu bt Gerard
Jnnes 'arrn.1 s A «: A. C.. Ptnrh /Mom
bt J. K, Fimii iwbitcbwcbi 1 bl: C.
M. I.»n tLannlnad KaM bl R. E. PulUiet
iA,hbarntian,i > hi.
_ J- J- M- Captan <H nrplrAdtMil bt J.
P. H1I1, (Cardiff! 1 bl: P. M. Rldurk
iClentvrvlrl M K. R. HnpUw I VmStirtl-
hnn" 7 A 6; J. C. Jtrnitor tRatlvri bl
C. F. GIKnnl (Nrwportl 19th: J. B.
qv*« (Hnrwinka) bl J. R. Parry
tCarrnu l hlr; W. I. Tnckfr (Mam bt
V. G. JniKN IRyl Porthcawli * * 5:
SEMI-FIN AES. — MISS OXI.EV hi Mn
Piprr. 4 A 5; MRS FREARSON bt Mn
Ban'lay. S' A 2.
11th to gain the lead. Mrs Piper's
approach at the 12th was a shade
ton big and overran the green.
Her chip-back left her too much
to do. Both were bunkered at the
short Hth and Mis* Oxley holed
from Bft to win the hole in three
and go three up. She increased
her lead with a par four at the
14th and the match ended with a
half Bt the next.
In the other semi-final Mrs
Frearson won the 5th, 6th and 7th
to go three up on Mrs Cathie
Barclay, who promptly stmek bark
bv holing a good putt to take the
8th.
Mrs Frearson drove into the
ditch at the 9th and another good
utt bv Mrs Barclay on the 21th
A superb pitch and run by Mrs
Frearson enabled her tn resume
the lead with a birdie fonr at the
12th, sod she increased this to
two at the 13th with a. three
after Mrs Barclay was bunkered.
.A skilful pitch and run enabled
Mrs Barclay to snatch a half at
the 14th, but she went three down
at the 15th when her approach
faded into a bunker. The game
ended at the 16th. which was
halved in three.
Soccer
Bloomfield gets his
£100,000 man
By ROBERT OXBY
J ON SAMMELS, the Arsenal and former England
under- 23 international forward, duly signed yes-
terday for Leicester for £100,000 after making public
his regret to Ipswich, who ;
had also sought his Mo , OIvCvrff ,,„
services. c -
“I was grateful for the RRAT) HVTTFRY
offer from Bobby Robson, AXIhJXlJ 111 JU XIX
their manager," he said. “ but TC DT AW r rr A
such has been my admiration In JjL/LfW I II
for Jimmy . Bloomfield, the \
Leicester manager, that I 7 T v T f T'T 17 UADT7S
really had little alternative. J. 1 JL IjJEit XiUt i-iu
Dinah Oxley
. RECORDS FOR
TOMBOUNI
Michele Tomboliai, the Italian
water-skier, broke two Euro-
pean distance records in a fine
run over the measured circuit
on Lake Maggiore yesterday,
reports Reuter from Milan.
TomboJini passed the 10-kilo-
metre (6-2-mi!eJ mark in 5min
37-8sec. averaging R6-2mpb. He
crossed the 50-kilometre line
(3T-069 miles) in 5Qmin 58-6sec,
averaging 60-Bmph.
Soccer
RECORD DEFICIT
Shrewsbury .had a record trading
loss of £30.816 last year, despite
an increase of more than £10.000
in gate receipts.
services.
“ I was grateful for the
offer from Bobby Robson,
their manager," he said, “ but
such has been my admiration
for Jimmy Bloomfield, the
Leicester manager, that I
really had little alternative.
“I was also impressed with
Dry's performances when we
played against them in- the FA
Cup last season.”
Mr Bloomfield said he greeted
with relief the arrival of Sara-
mels, his first major signing since
he succeeded Fra ok OTarrell last
month. M 1 had Jon in mind' from
the start.” he said. “Although he
is a midfield player, I shall want
him to get goals.”
Stoke explain
Meanwhile the new £50.000
five-year contract which has made
Tony Waddington. of Stoke, one
of football’s- highest paid man-
agers. suggests that dobs are bc-
roming nervous following the
managerial merry-go-round this
summer.
Albert Hrnshall. the Stoke
chairman, said la«t night: “Top
class managers are hard to find
and hard to keep.”
As Arsenal, Leicester. . Orient
and Wntfo-d. to name 8 few. will
confirm, clubs have little protec-
tion when others cast covetous
eyes nn their employees. Higher
wages, or some form of transfer
system, now appear inevitable.
Ovxtdl Fulire. who Inst Oorge
Mrhw. their rnarh. when he re*
olaeprt Mr Btonrn field as Orient’s
manager, hone to miww«re the
name rvf -a successor- today.
Preview plan banned
Huff fax’* plan - to re hoarse in
friendly matches against' Dimdalk
and Drogheda the offside law ex-
periment to he used In the Wetter ,
Pud. in whirh they Dlffv Man-
chester United on July 5. has met
with a setback.
The FA have forbidden them
tn have pre-exnerienne of the ex-
periment. in which offside operate*
onlv within the oen»Hv area, hot
George Kirby, the Halifax mana-
ger. is unabashed and has
announced his intention of arrang-
ing extra private matches behind
closed doors.
Brighton have signed Alan
Dbvey. Chelsea reserve goal-
keeper. and agreed terms with
Freston for Willie Irvine, former
Northern Ireland international
striker. Both players ' were on
loan to them last season.
By TONY BUTLER
T>HIL READ, who broke
his collarbone in a spill
during practice For ' the
Czech Grand Prix on Friday, *
will be out of action for at. '
least four weeks.
This is a serious setback to
Read's chances of regaining the
250 C.C. world title, but be hopes
to be fit in time for the inter-
national meeting at Silverstone
on Aug. 22.
There will be no immediate ~
cutback, in the BSA-Triumph .
racing programme despite the -
recent closure of the Binning*-'
ham competitions department,. ■!.
responsible for trials and moto-
cross activities.
Jim Curry. British 125 c.c.
champion in 1968, has announced
his retirement from racing. Curry
has been racing regularly on tile
Continent in recent vears. but -
insufficient start money, coupled
with ever-increasing .expenses, a '
regular complaint from Grand
Prix riders this season, has forced ?
him to retire.
Sheene success
After his success on Sunday In',
the Czech Grand Prix on the ':
50 c.c. Kreidler. Barry Sheene'.
Mill ride the machine in the
Swedish Grand Prix at the week-. •
end.
Andy Robertson's switch . from -
BSA to Husqvarna seems to have
had the desired effect. Riding
the new machine in the British
250 c.c moto-cross championship
at Carlton Hill. Yorkshire, -
Robertson, considered by BSA a -
future world cham Dion, finished \
third in both races.
Few riders switch successfully
from one branch of the snort to '
another, hat the former G reeves
works rider Arthur Browning
looks like being one of them
Browning, whose contract with
Greevcs was terminated at the
weekend, has been riding in
second-half events at Binning-. *
ham’s impressive Perry Barr*
track, and on the evidence of im' 4
performance on Monday evening .
seems to have a future in speeds
way. r
j:. i
Channels 22, 36. 51, 35,
4. 46. 50, 51, 53, 57. 5«
on. Cricket — Test
di: England v India.
'atch with Mother.
■15, News. 13S loot
). Dyfal Done*.
0. Cricket — Test
latch; Ascot Racing
3, 3.30, 4 races 1-
•lay School. 4.40 Jack-
nory. 4.55, Marine Bov.
.van & Ronnie. 5-50,
ews.
on This Week lor
onal News'. 6-20. Dr
rpL 6.43, We Want to
he Virginian.
?uk — Mike Yanveod !
.. 9."0. Show Jumping
a The Roy aJ In ter -
'ai Horse Show.
!4 Hours.
Movie*Mekers : Rod
eicer at the N.F.T.
Weather; inot Lon-
Regional News &
2r.
SYLVIA CLAYTON'S CHOICE
The 77th season of the Proms begins opulently with Mahler’s 8th Symphony
(Radio 3, 7.39). following the recent custom of giving the yhole first evening to one
major work. The “ Symphony of 1.000 ” will not quite live up to its name, but there
will be 845 people on the platform, seven soloists, nearly 700 singers from the B B C
Choral Society, the New Philharmonia Chorus, the London Philharmonic Choir and
the Wandsworth School Boys’ Choir, and an augmented BBC Symphony Orchestra.
Colra Davis will conduct bis first performance of this vast romantic work, which
includes a setting of the dosing scene of Goethe’s “ Faust.”
Bishop JoceJin’s cathedral at Wells has a superb west front, a decorative clock
23-year-old Gyles Brandreth. a young writer, looks at Wells both as a tourist
and a moated palace complete with swans. In The Life of a Cathedral (BBC-2, 8.0)
attraction drawing 200,000 people every year and as a religious institution trying to
maintain an architectural masterpiece.
A new comedy series from Manchester Get the Drift (B B C-2, 9.20) is a revue
of songs and sketches by the Tyneside singer Aiex Glasgow and Henry Livings,
author of “Big Soft Nellie” and “Eh? Roy Kinnear, who has starred in Livings's
plays, is among the guests.
A— Yoga for Health. 4.25,
* Sluppy. 4J3, Secret
Squirrel.
(j 2Q — FoUyFoot. 5.50. News.
0 — Riptide IdiamaJ.
7— -On the Buses, rpL 1.30,
1 Sky’s the Limit.
n.-1.45. At Lin Mam.
5, Hftddiiv. 7.10. Dyfal
T-55, Here's Lucy. S-
The Spinners- 11.5,
u Ffeithiau. 1L40.
* 2
1,30, Play SchooL
Cricket — Test
teb: England v India.
*.vs.
Life of a Cathedral
Gyles Brandi eth-
irowiss Out the Coo-
Peter Brook,
t Lhe Drift (series —
tild 1 bitter humour
weet & sour soas:-)-
The Spoils of Poyn-
ferial). rpL
e»s. 10.35. Augustine
Hipno. author of
^■rv of God.”
— LONDON
TV & London
bannel 23
Report — It's_ a
e j-oued. rpt*. 3.45.
•a=
is. Wiather:
‘ Special 1 6
1, Tonv Black-
30, New*). 9.
Ikei iSJSfl.
i:amv Yottna
Ne«vs'-
ivh: Stuart
;n £ 1-Cfi.
v-v Bricdea
3. Xe«iJ Cd
. i.:o.
:b;e : Rosko
6. Sounds of
g— The FA1.
0— Kate t drama).
11) — -News. 10.30, Police 5.
,u 10.10, “The Mummy’s
Hand” (1940 A film'*.
Id— On Reflection — Roy
Strong on Gainsborough,
rpt. L2J1S, A Li kely Story*.
I.T.A. — REGIONS
Al V (Midland* I
Colour Channels 43. SO. 61
3 oq p.m.. Horoscope; Women
• W Today. 4.10. Peytop
Place. 4.40. Zing^ong. 4.5o.
Thunderbirds. o-50.
fi. Today, with Sports Re-
porL
e Oq — Crossroads. 7. Sky's the
Limit. 7.30. The Trouble
with You, Lilian*. 8. Hawaii
Five-0. 9. London. 10. News.
10 30. “The Black Scor-
pion" (1357 X
Weather.
Yorkshire TV
Colour Channel 47
1 ffn pjn.-2. People Work
l. t IU H ere *. 3. Houseperty.
3.15, Women Are People.
3.40. Yoga for Health. 4.10.
Calendar N e w s. Ala,
Matinee*. 4.10. Zinsalnng.
4 55. Land of the Oiants.
5 en \e«‘5. 6. Calendar. 6.30.
McQueen ( drama*. 1.
ckv's the Limit. 7-oD. The
Coinediaos HD. Loodon. 10,
News. 10-30. “Night oT the
Hunter” »WoS X
Robert Mitcbum. 1—
Weather.
Granada
Colour Channel ?9
A Ifl p.m. Nevs; Pevton
Plate*. 4«. Thunder-
birds 5.33. Nev»sd«v <5.^8.
News); Police F?!e - ®— *•
the 70s: Alan Black t6J»,
Ne*s ). 7-2J. .As Radio 2.
RADIO % (1500ml
c on a.nj.. News. Weather:
3,0 J Breakfast Special (6.
g tin — VHF. 7, 7.38, 8. News;
K£7, Karins: bulletin). 8.55,
Pause for Thought .8. News:
Pote Murray (10. News:
19.15. Ctiuvkle*). II, News;
cto-v 11.15. Wassoner*'
Walk. rpt. 11.80. Mrs Mills
& Reginald Dixon. I— News;
.cam Costa ' L. News: MB.
Chuckles; 1.50. Sports Desk j.
2. News: Woman’s Hour.
O— News: Ed Stewart l.iod &
J 4. News). 4.15. Waggoners
Walk- 4-30. News; Sporta
The Trouble with You,
Lilian. 6.5 5, The Saint
7 55— The Odd Couple. 8J0.
*’ Scales of Justice. 9.
Kate. 10, News. 10.30, Oprn
Night l viewers’ n iticisms »-
ll.i0-12.40. Stanley Kubrick's
“ 1 he Killmg “ > iS16(» A
film i*: Sterling Hayden.
HTV General Service {Wales
i West)
Colour Channels 41 & 61
0 15 pjn.4.7. Land of the
Gianls*. 4.9. Horoscope.
Moment of Truth*. 4.40,
Women Only. 5.6, Zingalon--
5.19, Fobtu Hood*. 5 JO.
News 6.1. Report WesL 6.18.
Report Wales. 6^5, Cross-
roads.
7 — The Great Missouri
‘ Raid” ( IP-50 A film 1 :
Wendell Core.'- 8^0. The
Trouble with S'ou. Lilian*. 9,
Kate. 10. News. 10.30.
Paper Round iquLsl. 11, Dr
Puce of Llantrisant, ItitiO’
1893. 13, Weather.
HTV WesL Colour Channel
61: As Gen. Service except
— 4.7 pjn.-l,9 5; 6.1-6.35, Re-
port WesL
HTV Wal es. Colour Channel
41, HTV Cymru -Wales: As
Gen. Service except —
1 15 P-m., Mr. Piper*. 3. 454. 3.
Hamdden. 6.1-6.18. Y
Dydd. 10.30-11, This Very
Peculiar World*.
Westward TV
Colour Channels 25 & 41
•) RJ* p.m., Tonv Jacklin Con-
quers Haaeltine cgolfi.
3J!3. Following Columbus.
3^8. Reoinnal New?: Ziag-
along. 4J0, Gus Hoaeybun.
4.20, Gilligan's Island. 4.55.
Land of the Giants. 5*50,
News.
C — Westward Diary*. S35.
* Sports Desk*- 6.35. Cross-
roads. 7. Sky's the Limit
7.30, The Trouble *»ith You.
Lilian*. 8. Deoartment S. 9.
Kate I drama i. 10. News.
10.2S, Regional News. 10.33.
“The Girl He Left Behind”
11956 U filmi* : Tab Hunter.
Desk: Charlie Chester iS &
5.30. News: 5-15. ChucklesJ.
6. News: Album Time >634.
Nevsi. 6-45, Sports Desk.
7. News: Folk on Friday. 8.
News: Snorts Desk: Thanks
for Hie Memory. 8.35. Music
Night 10. News: Late Night
Extra <11. News’. 12, Ne«-s.
12.5. Nip ht Ride (1. News).
2-2.2 News.
RADIO 3 1164. 194m i
7 a-m.. News. Weather: Morn-
1 ins Concept, reeds <S> 'S.
News'. 3- New»: This
Week's Cuuioostis — Bala-
krer 5. Muiaoiiikv -S'.
3.55. Music Makins. 10^5,
Music fiom Vienna.
Natalie Woud. 12JM. Faith
for Life; Weather.
Southern TV
Colohr Channels 27, 68
3 in p.nu. Yoga for Health.
3,3a, Horoscope: Women
Today. 4.10. Houseparty.
4.23. Cartoon. 4J30. Cross-
roads. 4J5. Forest Rancers.
5.20. Folly F00L 5*50, News.
6 1 Channels 6. II. 27). Day
by Das; (Channels 10 & 66 J.
Scene South-east*.
C 711 — The Trouble with You,
D '* ,u Lilian. 7. Sky’s the
LimiL 7^6. “Pool of Lorn
don" 1 1951 A film)*: Bonar
Colleano. Susan Shaw. 9,
Kate. 10. News. 1 9 JO. Week-
end. 10.35. Name of the
Game. 12. Regional News.
12.10. Weather; It's Ail
Yours.
Channel Is. TV
7 55 P-“- Tony Jacklin Con-
' quers Hazeitine (golf).
3.25-3.56, Following Colum-
bus. 4. ZingaJong. 4.10.
Puffin. 4J20. Gillian’s Island.
4^55. Land of tbe Giants.
5^0. News. 6. Regional
News & Weather; What's
On Where.
C 1C — GnartneL 6J5. Cross-
J roads. 7. Report. 7-30.
The Trouble with You.
Lilian. A Department S. 9.
Kate. 10. News. 10 J2. “The
Girl He Left Behind" (1956
U film': Tab Hunter,
Natalie Wood. l!2t, French
News; Weather.
Anglia TV
Colour Channels 24. 25. 41. 58
4 p.m. Regional News*: Yoga
n For Health. 4J0. Romper
Room. 4.50, Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea. 5^0.
News.
c — About Anglia, wilh Time
Out Sc Trend. 6^5, Cross-
roads. 7, Sky's the LimiL
7.30. Glamour 71. 8. Hawaii
Pivfe-0. 9. Kate. 10. News.
10.30, Name of the Game.
12, Reflection.
• Not colour
71 oc — Test Match Special:
Enaland v India at
11^1^5. 2-lMjSO. 4J0-
6.30, 6J0-6-37 (medium wave'
1 1.35-1.40, News: 1 .50-L55,
Scoreboard 1.
C 07 (medium wave'. Stock
Market Report. 6.40.
Study on 3— The Betiveen-
ascr »\TIF : 6-30-7, Open
l l nh'pr$it}'l: ”, Music in the
Theatre. 7.30, The Protns:
Opening Night oF the 77th
Season — Mahler >Sl '5-6.20. A
Lean. Pale. Sallow. Shabb'.
St.'ikins Young Man 1 . 9-25.
■■ A \’ei» Hnspildhle Per-
son ■’ (Malcolm B-adburv
play). 10-10. Tchaiko\skv:
OPERA. BALLET & CONCERTS
• MAItNtt IOUAI
i~w£m~o fEiA
Ev »»- 1.50- Until Tuv%. tt-n Jnli ua
KBS ME. KATE '
SgftV rtPfEsLSFtu tfes
Jus caienasr .Seats »v«U«bJc Wcff.
4 l ■ Tbur. nut.
COVENT GA.KDEN ROSi A.L OPEAA.
Last pert, ot currut wm
Ski. At 7.30
OXFEO ED RUR1DICE
VauRtisn. l'sstilry. Minton
..... tjWdJiflur: Mncfcemn
SEATS A\ AlLAgJJE . 1 24(1 1 066.)
GLi NDEBOUlt.Mi EtiSril AL OPERA
UQtU Aug. 3. wliti tie Lonnos
PbiUnTRioaic . inJa> st
»« . 3.3 (Sunday Unt»
ARl \UNE AUI- NAXOS iSIrHUag
Jew titkeis at £6 a £7. '(.niorruwr
A. M.iii. at a 55 LA L-ALISTu
tCa\Mi>l> ptwslblt rrlnrce.l licLrla
ar Wen iiotlw. iux Oner; ClyoJr-
niunir. L.-wr» tltidumrr 41 1 1, and
'»•>* * -nil all. 1 '12. YVIgiuora
Sllr rl iQl-floi IO10I.
OUhtN Eta/XBEIJI HALL. 1928
0151.1 July i 9-SI . Direct ftum
HUNUAUIAN GtPS\
CQMMNN. Mou-Frt. at 7.45.
HM- al_4.15 A 7.4S.
"Oijli KUSliVAl - HALL, (928
3191.1 l» oyi> Canr — ^Gilbert a
aeagb. ^ jMiy M rHfe
ROVAL FESTIVAL HALL. <928
3191.) Aug- 24 lo Sept. 16
London Festival M et
SADLER'S WRLLS THEATRE. Roae-
benr Avenge. E.c.1. (657 1676.1
LONDON OPERA CENTRE
Tonight A Bat, at 7. WtUUn TaW.
THEATRES
ADELPHt. 856 7611. Th- next 7-0
SutW. 7.50. Mats. -in. S-P- Sat. 4.0
THE MC'SICAL OF A LIFETIME!
SHOW BOAT
ritirt-.iiiiMs. 93 d 3216. Fully' alr-
Kvs. a. but s. IS A 8.50
ALAN BATES in BtJTLEY
bsJNiruiai Gray. Oir.: Harold piuler.
®8ISr« S“w. . aPYfl* 4
”A Sl'MI'l ItOUb MUSICAL. " D.T.
THE GREAT WALTZ
A MUSICAL ROMANCE
on lhe "la ot JOHANN SI RATJ5S.
• HUG LL1 KNJO\ ABLE . S . Tlmaa
DUCSCSS. 836 8243. Bt«r. 8^30
Fn. A Sal. 6.15 and 8.30
'■ IT'S TRUE. IT IS." The Sun.
** The Dirtiest Show in Town ”
•'MakW ’Oil! CALCUTTA!' SbhM
LIKE -'UI ILF. WOMEN' * IT'S
FUNN IER L HAN UOIH-" N.l.lota
DUKE OT YORK'S. “'836 5F22-
I v. nlnq-- 8.15. Sjt. 5.4S ft 8.45
MjIs. I'hiim. -J.4S (IlNliirnl pnera)
WILFRID HYDE Will IF.
KIIPEItl COO IE U KOI TREY
HUMNUt ORirFnil JONES
WlWfll.IV PITHEY In W. II. Home’s
TIUS JOCKEY CLUB STAKES
•■Ah evruiug _oI_ atviieuua hailing.^
POirrilNF.. ' 836 2238. “ ‘Eve*. 8.0
Mat 1 *. I loirs. 2.43. Ml. 5.30. B.30
CrrnM I'l.uliU Janel UUNRO Ran-y
TOW'U. La-hli-y SltHlil'a l.’tHIlie Hit
LOOK, NO HANI>8!
OllIP_A MINtrTF. ■■ £. stand.
riAUItlLK.. »7.6 460 1- Mu lo Th 8.6
Iri., Sal. 3.S0. Pntil Daaentaa
-• Very [aunv. sunilnj Timos.
In HiLARJOL'S St«V Comply
DON'T START WITHOUT ME
GLOBE. 437"iS92. ”7.30.' Sat. 376
ALAN BADEL as KEAN
A Comedy by Jean Paul Sartre.
Hilarious cnmedjr . . acting nr— Uon.
D. 82. U'a tbe fu«nl*at. D. MIt.
HAYMAJUCET. 930 9832. Em. 8.0
Satm. 5.0 ft 8.15. Mats. Wad. 2.30
GLADYS COOPER
JOAN GREENWOOD
MICHAEL PETER
GOOD LI FF E BAVLI88
THE CHALK GARDEN
•• OND OF THE BEST PLAYS IN
LONDON.” — CUwreer.
Lm ? sveeha ol Ltwilted Season.
HAVMARKET 930 9832 Aug. 4 7.0
Snh. 8.0. Wed. 8.30. Rat. 5.0. 8.13
^K ER N P 4 1 TtAM 1 S N ,jr ALEC^UINNESS' 'j'ERfc M ?'°a RDTT
ted.Vrur pV- =?! 28. 4 S,*** 1 *"*? ’iit^nthar
u.nwvrw. ~ * 23a~eana A Voyage Koand My Father
Red. Pncr Previ. Juiy 26. 27. 28.
ALDWVCH. _ 3,36 6404
JttiC'i 3971. '72 Luudon Season:
Max I at Gorky 'a
Enemies
iToflMM. WeU. ft Tours. 7.30. To-
mornjw S.oO ft 7.30. A up. 7 m ft
«. 9. 10*: Hairilij new play
OLD TIMES -(Man. Tues. B.O. Aug.
J ffl t n- 3. 13. 14 m ft i'll
Stmrfrrd-uDOn-Avon'-. A MIDSUM-
MER NIGHT'S DREAM U«ly 30.
j I m ft e — all a»«b aO XdJ . -
4MKASSAUOR5. 01-856 1171
Bvg*. 8. Tue*. S.45- SaL 5 ft 8
AGATHA CHRIS] IE'S
THE MOUSETRAP
19th Bft LAI H TAKIN G YEAR!
APOLLO. 4a-'~2ftb3. EvrnlnjBi 8.0
Fri. ft Sal. 5.3D & 8-30
■-IF Hb Stfc \ BET I tR PLAY THIS
YEAR WE'LL BE. LUCK1.” Ohs.
forget-me-not lane
by PETE R NICHOLS.
CAMBRIDGE. 856 6056. fc*os. B.O
5MS. 3.30 * B.50. Mats. Thor. 3.0
INGRID BERGMAN
JOSS ACKLAND
and KENNETH WILLIAMS in
CAPTAIN BRASS BOUND'S
CONVERSION. _• .
Last C wveka Migct close July 31.
CAMBRIDGE. 836 6056. AH^ 5 _ «t
6.30. Sub*. 7.0. Sale. 1.0 ft 7.15
Faith Brook .Inho Wood vine
IAN MCKELLEN B*
HAMLE T
CHICHESTER- T«l. 1 63*3 86&S3
TonhjM ft July 2*. 86. 27 at 7-0
REUNION IN VIENNA. July 24
at 2.0. Jill* 28 at .7.0 .
C AESAR AND CLEOPATRA.
COLISEUM. 836 - 316I.‘ Untn Tu«r
men July 29 ft 31- Evas. 7.30
JOSS ME, KATE
"An aadtunillnn rwetiinn of ^ood
tune-, well Ming.” Guardian.
COMEDY' "930 2578. JL 15 5'6.''S.<0.
Vt. 3 30 Red once*. Charter, ring well
Gay Siaglelon Richard Coleman
In 6tb Greet Year. Terence FTr-Jiy'*
THERE’S A GIRL IN MT SOUP
LONG ^r T A u 'S£{. N ^S^ EX,Y
Beaux .^rts Trio (S)- 10-54-
Schubert & Wolf songs (SI.
News..
(Si Stereophonic. VHF.
RADIO 4 (330. Htim)
C je a.BU News; Farming
Today. 6.4B. Prayer For
the Day. 8.50. Re^i nnal
News; Weather. 7, Today;
News. 7.40. Today’s Papers.
7.50. Regional News;
7.45, Thought for the Da.v.
Weather. 8. News; Today.
8.40. Today’s Papers. 8.45.
ParliamcnL
B — Npws. 9-o. The Enier-
a tainers: Jark Buchanan.
9.50, Islands in Julv. 10-15,
Scivice. IDJiO. Music Hour.
«6. 8.0. Set. 5.50
I. 3-0 Red'd price*
r MORLEY
HER MAJERrt"^ 950 6606. 7-30
Wed. ft Sat. 8.30 'Red prlcMi
BARRY MARTIN la
FIDDLER ON TflJE ROOF
atop <f rrI»B Stella Mor ay- 5th Y cwr.
LYRIC. 437 3686. 8.O. Sat. 5.50
8.50. Mel. Wed. 3-0 Red'd price*
ROBERT MORLEY
M*ry MILLER ft Jen HOLDEN
How The Other Half Lores
the New Comedy hy A!no Ayckbourn,
author Ot ■- Relatively SpeaKbin. - '
VERY. VERY’ FUNNY- Standard.
_ OVE R 350 P ERF ORMANCES . _
MA* FAIR. 629 3036- Evna. 8.15
Sat. 6.15 * 8.45. GEORGE 1 COLE la
BEST COMEDY OF THE YEAR
Evening St* tul a rd A ward
THE PHILANTHROPtBT
by ChrMopher Hampton. Best play
of 'he year. Play * ft players Award.
MERMAID. 248 7656. BastatunM
• 248 2835. Eva. 8.40. Jonathan
Miller* prodacdon nf Lowefl'n
PROMETHEUS BOUND.. 10,30
a.m. ft 2.50 P.m. Until SaL
LENINGRAD THEATRE OP TBE
YOUNG SPECTATOR. From July
29 MICHAEL REDGRAVE lo
THE OLD BOVS.
THE NATIONAL THEATRE
NEW. 856 3878. Tonrflht. Toe*. *
Wed. 7.30. To in nr row ft Ttinr. arxt
at 5 ft 7.30: AMPHITRYON 58.
OLD VIC. 928 76 T 6. Tonight ft Wed.
7 50 ft Thur. ora 2.15 ft 7.30 tut
nerfs. of: THE MERCHANT OF
VENICE. Tomorrow 2.15 & 7.50 ft
Mon. ft Tumi. 7.30 Inst perf*. of:
THE CAPTAIN OF KOEENICK.
OPEN AIR. Repent'* 486 8451
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM
7.45. Mm . Wed . Thur. Sat. 2.30.
OPEN SPAC E . 5 BO 4970 - Mem hem
'SWEET EttOS " A - NEXT.**
Evea. 8 p-m. Inc. Sun. lex Mon.)
SUGAR PLUM 1.15 Mm,, to Sat.
Late night Th. F n 5a t. l Q.a o.
PALACE- *37 6834. 2nd YEAR
Eva*. 8. fri. ft Sat. 5.50 ft 8.50
SUGAR PLCM 1.15 Mm.' to Sat.
Late night Th. Fn 5at. 1 0-80-
Evg*- 8. fri. ft Sat. 5.50 ft
DANNY LA KTO
AT THE PAUACE
wilh ROY HUDD.
1IJ>0. From Us to You
tseriesl — miscellanv. 12..
Aonouncemeats.- IS. 10. You -
& Yours — Yoor Own Time.
12.35, Twenty Questionfi, rpL-
1235, Weather.
1— eWorld at One. 1-35, The
Archers, rpt MS, Listen
with Mother. 2, Steve Race.
J, " The Honest Man ”
(Michael Voysey play). 4,
Sounds Familiar. 4J30. Story
Time— “My Land & Mv
People * l serial ). 5. PM
I news magazine). 5J0,
Regional News; Weather.
C — News- S.15. Brain of
“ Britain FiosL rpL S.45,
The Archfers. 7, Ntws Desk.
7JB. Pick or the Week. K3fl,
Look Who’* Talking!
. (people & issues k 9.15.
The Abortion Dilemma (dis-
cussion). 8^8, Weather.-
IQ— World Tonieht 10.45.
IU Parliament. 1U4. As
Others See Us. 11, Book at
Bedtime. 11.15. The Next
Programme Follows Almost
Immediately. .11.40, Coastal
forecast. 11.43. Weather,
' News. 11^0-12.4. Market
Trends.
REGIONAL HEM
• Midland (376m >
19 IQ p.m-11^5, Your MP at
1U Westminster.
DEON. St Martin k Lap*. 85a D69]
THE ANDKUUEilA STRAIN <AA1
Lom. prog* 2.15. 5.0. 7.45. Sun.
4.50. T.'iS- l*lf *l»w Sat. 11-15.
ANDROMEDA al .8.45, 5.30.
8.15. Sun. 5.0. 8 . 0 .
ARJS-PULLMAN. SUl. Kra. 873
5898. Rwuwli JE T'AIME JE
T'AIAIE IAJ. 2.4 5.4.45.6.43.8.43
_ DIO ONE. 0*1. Clr. i]T 33on
BLUE WATER. WHYTE DeSTTH
tUk .Pm 12.50. 3.15. 3.45. 8.13
FORK INTERNATIONAL
YOUTH ARTS FESTIVAL
lam to si»t jniy _
1 Bo cVeBl* — from 20 MHUlWei —
1 ,600 wrlornirh
Ul «|)T FOUR? EVENTS COST
ONLY 100
POP - FOLK - CLASSICAL -
THEATBE - DANCE - POETRY
JAZZ-MOVIES-EXHLBmONS
AT LEAST Vi DIFFERENT EVENTS
EA CH DA A
DMalli. from: THEATRE ROYAL.
YORK <0904-381621.
I
.]
2g The Daily Telegraph , Thursday, Julg 39, 1971 ' ■
Gillette Cup - Semi-Finals
SPIN-ARTIST GIBBS
PITS BRAKE ON
KENT’S BATSMEN ■
Kent, scored 258 and Wwvnckt'hSre wore 0 for nought
ire reply after- one otter when bad light stopped play.-
By E. W. SJf ANTON at Canterbury.
TF I say that the atmosphere of this Gillette
semi-final, tie at Canterbury yesterday was
razor-keen, let ine add that it was also fought
in a completely chivalrous spirit. . _
The honours ■ were evenly shared, the early play
going Kent's way but Warwickshire coining back into the ■
second half of the innings in a way only possible for ah
experienced well-disciplined side.
The scoreboard
Luckhurst's effort provided
the backbone for Kent, but if
the palm had to be awarded
at- this stage it might well go
to Gibbs for a beautifully
- controlled piece of spin bowl-
ing in conditions anything but
helpful to him. What an
artist!
Delayed start
The only sour thing about the.
day. was the weather which, .after
a late start at 12. made it im-
possible For the game to be com-
pleted before nightfall unless
one side , or the other collapsed.
In light that was seldom good,
and sometimes sepulchral, the
cricket was plared In the keenest
possible manner before as many
people as could 'cram into the* St
Lawrence -Ground.
The gates were closed to Cars
an hour before the start, -with
16AJ00 occupying every inch of
space. It is said that in HM8,
when there were many fewer cars.
25.000 crammed in to see Don
Bradman's Australians, but it is
hard to think that many of them
saw much of the play.
Dead pitch
The toss obviously was a prime
one to win, and Dcnoess was
clever enough to do so. Warwick-
shire. therefore, were condemned
to bowl on a dead pitch and to.
field on a wet and slippery surface.
There was no spite in the wicket,
though it was, of course, difficult
to force the length ball for runs.
The clear objective was a steady
start, and there . was never a
moment when one doubted that
Luckhurst and the left-handed
Nicholls would build the right
sort of foundation.
Warwickshire took a calculated
risk bringing in David Brown, .who
has been going from one specialist
to another with a mysterious and
highly painful injury in the area
of the bre,
KENT
H. W. LUcVllillVt. C M. J. K. Smith.
b Ghta ... a*
D. NlcboDj. c Jjunemn. b Blonklron 43
*M. U. Dennm*. e Kaobat. 0 iMulh 27
A. G. E. Enlbcm. c Ann. h Gibbs JS
tA. P. E- Knott. c A b Gibbs 0
Asi f IqbnI. b Blrnikiron 24
J. -N. . Shepherd, nut nut 5
R. A. VVnoImcT. b Blnnkfmn 17
B. Jnlien. ■ a. C. Smith, b Bl environ T
D. L. Underwood. I K*nhai.
_ b VIcVTcker ... T
J. N. Graham, not out ' ■ 1
Btlrw lib B:-«v 3.--nb 4> 14
59-4 o««r». Total ".238
Foil or \»lrfcct»: 1-95. 2-163. 3-167.
4-167, 5-182. 6-192. 7-212. 8-229,
9-336. ■ • ' ’
Bowling: Brown 12-2-40-0: McVicker
11 -4-3.41-1 : Blmklran 12-0-51-4; GIfahs
.12*0-44.3: lbadnlla 13-0-48-1.
WARWICKSHIRE
J. IVhIKlioim. n«l nut O
J. A. Jjmwoo, not our 0
Torsi- <no wkt) 0
To butt R. B. Ksnhsl. M. J. K.
Smith. D. L. Amiss, W. Blrnlriron. R.
Ibadniu. -tA. C. Smith. N. M. Mo
YIckcr. D. J. Brown. L. R. GTbba.
ireastbone.
steadily.
McVicker likewise. Nicholls, how-
ever, sqnat and strung, was
neither outclassed nor overawed
and for a while was in rather
better trim than Luckhurst.
39 in 14 overs
Fourteen overs before lunch
produced 3» runs, 22 of them to
Nicholls. Further rain delayed the
restart and when it came the pace
quickened slightly. The next fall,
at Bfi for no wicket, was more
serious and there r'oiild be no
more cricket until after tea.
Brown, who bad an injection at
unch. was in much distress; but
,e completed his 12 overs to warm
£
applause. Luckhurst hooked
-BIcnkiron (who was inclined to
drop short) for six to long-leg..
The Kent crowd were very chirpy
by the time' Nicholls in the 26th
over was held otf a fast chance
to Jam^xon at slip for 45 made
out of 95.
Luckhurst, batting admirably
now. and Denness were confined
by Gibbs and Ibadulla at the
most critical phase of the innings.
Had either faulted in length or
line there must have been a rare
plandering.
Id fact, the score continued to
average just four an over and the
dismissal of Denness mot quite in
tonch by his present lofty stan-
dards) was followed by the decline
that prevented the Kent score
reaching conclusive dimensions.
' Fine -Amiss throw-*
Luckhurst, Knott, Ealham and
Shepherd followed the captain in
six over« as a result of some
excellent Warwickshire out-cricket,
wherein a fast run-in and throw
by Amiss From deep mid-on that
knocked out the middle stump at
the far end was the outstanding
item.
-Asif would not be subdued 'until
he went too far and aimed to rut
a yorker. There followed a brisk
and sensible little innings -by
Woolmer to put . some much
needed kick into the tail.
By tradition. Gillette light need
not be as bright as at other times.'
but it was • really- very gloomy
when Warwickshire came in to
face a possible 55 minutes and
aftern one maiden over the um-
pires relieved them of anxiety.
Justice was served by their
decision and there is every pros-,
pect of ; a fine struggle when
hostilities are resumed at 11
o'clock today.
Schools Cricket. Review— II
DENSTONE BOY SCORES
FOUR CENTURIES
By OUR SCHOOLS CRICKET CORRESPONDENT
"HOWLING their overs at the brisk rate of 24 an hour,
Denstone played 14 games against schools this season.
They won 8. drew 5 and lost only to Worksop, with M.
Morgan scoring 863 runs, including four centuries. A. J
Hignell made 747 and com-
pleted 1,000 runs for the
school before his 16th
birthday.
The bowling was held to-
gether by the accurate left-arm
spin of S. A. dc Beider, who
took 52 wickets at 13.42.
Four victories in four matches
at the Eastbourne Festival
brought Tonbridge's season to a
climax. The week before they
had beaten MCC and Old Ton-
bridgians, so they finished with
six surressive wins.
In nH they won seven school
matches, drew one and Inst one.
They played attractive, enter 1
prisms cricket, looking hostile
and effective in the field.
Sevenoaks unbeaten
Sevenoaks were undefeated by
schools, as in 1970, and in ail
matches they . won seven, drew
four and lost one. They had a
useful attack and ample batting,
led by C. J. Tavare. IS. who
scored 458 runs in 10 days in
July to bring his season's total
to 565.
A qood team effort brought
Dover many sncresscs against
schools, but they found some of
the club skies ton strong- Six
school matrhes were won. one
spoilt tav min and one, against
Brighton. Inst.
At Sutton Valence, a mediocre
side was held together by the out-
standing c.mtaincy and hatting
of A. P. Scott. The loading
bowler was a promising 15-year-
old. C. J. Beacon.
Brighton ended their season on
a top note, when an unfinished
partnership between F. F. Thom-
son i.1491 .md P. J. Haves (142)
enabled them to declare at the
‘ Formidable total of 504 for no
wirket against Cranhrook.
Previous!'" they had shown in-
consistent form, and their full
record in school matches was fonr
wins, two draws and two losses.
Thev had plenty of stroke-player*
led by the consistent Haves <675
runs), hut the attack had virtu-
ally no spin.
With a youthful team. Ardlngly
did well to win Four and draw
four nf their .nine school games.
Tbcir sole defeat was by Whit pit
in their final match. Two of the
youngest members. I. F. Cooke
tlfii, and D. A. Nirhols U8M.
scored 543 runs and took 39
wickets respectively.
A varied and well-balanced
attack at Lancing was ill sm>
ported bv Ihe battjnE. but the
season ended with a most enjoin
eble cricket week, when two or
the team’s four successes were
recorded.
Pierrepont key man
Eastbourne fielded a voting side
which depended heavily ,, on the
batting of the only experienced
member. P. J. D- Pierrepont. Vic-
tories were gained over Chnsrs
Hospital and Winchester.
A lack of real penetration in
the bowling prevented St John’s
Leatfaerbead,’ from winning seve-
ral times when- they had the
advantage. But in fact thev
armeved five victories and lost
only °nco. to MCC. The out-
standing feature was the opening
partnership of G. A. Ijw (609
runsi and J. L. Rose ‘5231.
Epsom won four school matches,
drew three and lost one only,
when Bughton beat them after a
declaration. R. p. G. Wilson
batted with admirable consis-
tency;- and was rewarded by selec-
tion for the Southern Schools XL
Dulwich, who had modest hopes
for this season, lost onlv to Epsom
and victories over Wbitgift and
SL Pauls helped to make their
figures satisfactory,
j 'yeslminster's cricket took a
derided turn for the better and
with lour wins against schools to
set against two defats and two
draws they ran look back on 3971
with considerable satisfaction.
_ Keel's had an eventful season,
hitting 3a sixes and catching or
running out nearly two-thirds of
their opponents. T. E. Cotton
against MCC took 28 runs off
one over, and N. Taunt hit 26 in
an pver against City Freemen's.
DeFOY PLAYS AT
SOUTHERNDOWN
. DeF °y- w ho was fourth
in me Open, has accepted an
invitation, to play in the £7.000
Piccadilly medal at Southern-
down. Glamorgan, on Aug. 11-14.
Jnbn Cook, the Open champion
oj Nigeria who narrowly escaped
capture in the recent attempted
coup in Morrocu. is also in the K4-
man field, which includes Bernard
Gallacher, and Peter Oosterfaois.
COLES JOINT THIRD
Roberta de Vicenro of Argentina
Heads the American Express Com-
pany s European Order of Merit
table with 10R points from Spain’s
Raman Sota t87i, with Neil. Coles
<G B>. Dale Hayes IS. Africa' and
Lu Liang Huan Lu (Formosa!
sharing third place with GO.
MINOR COUNTIES
AT JPMWMil Lone* 1SS iF. 95-
.V Jnftnsiin 4-55 1. Nartfaiunbrriaiid IDS
( R. Tan-rMlf 6-451 _
\f OdAitl, Doract 193-5 drr, iK, Ft.
HdM Ml. OVwd-hiif 127-9 tD.
9ti*rk!rtun 7-*l ». _ . _
At Luirm. Brd* 22B-7 d*C. (D. f. F.
Hum ,1. A. Curtis 761. Cnb< 90-5,
61 B-irh. Somnwl 182-8 dn.i E. Wwi-
fonl 55. J. MhtjubiIih 4.41k. W#»
132-5.
'At liocrin. Ultra 791 iB. Evtuu 46.
D. n tlsnn 4-51 1 5 Ork* 55-0.
At Ipvwfcb. Suffolk v Batin, ao pin.
CRICKETER CUP
Draw ("r the CridHtar Cun pnl-
flrul*. I" D? plajed on Stwdny. Is:
YYvkcDioiHts itrildersl V Toohruifliaiit at
lYInchnter: Uppingham Rnvera v Charter-
house Friars lUrpingtaraJ.
Luckhurst, of Kent, turns a ball from McVicker, of Warwickshire, to leg during;
' ; . ' his fine innings at Canterbury yesterday; ~
Lancashire beat Gloucester in
marathon
By HENRY CALTHORPE al Old Trafford t
. T AN CASH! R£ beat Gloucestershire with, three wickets
^ and three overs and one - ball to spare in the.,-,
longest and most exciting day’s play . in any. Gillette, .
Gup match so far, at Old-!... . T
“ ■ . The scoreboard
-mm?-
Knight drives Wood for a
single.
Tr afford yesterday.
r Play • continued wntil just
before nine o’clock in. the even-
ing having started at 11 g.m.
There were several stoppages
during, the day for. rain, hnt it
certainly was the : longest days
play In .which first-class .players -
have -taken part.
Gloucestershire won the toss
and batted first, making 229 for
six in the allotted 60 overs. It
•was a very fine score and set
Lancashire- an extremely - difficult
target. '
.- ; Flying start -
However, Lancashire made an
excellent start, the first . wicket
falling at 61. Wood , got half a
century before he was run out,
Clive Lloyd contributed 34 bat
the brunt of the work was taken
op- by the captain Bond and
Hughes. .
Their stand for the eighth
wicket of 27 was one of the Dest
seen in - this competition for a
.long time. . •
Hughes, finished up -by hitting
Mortimore incredibly for 24 runs
is the 56th- over. - It was beady
bewildering, cricket, for. Uhe light
- was- practically gone and the hands
of the clock pointed- to &55.
His amazing assault b rough the
scores level and in tbe-'next over
Bood drove Procter for the de-
cisive single which carried Lan-
casbire into the finaL
GLOUCESTERSHIRE '
R. B. NicOotV*. b Simmon* -.... 53
D. M. Grrn, ru* out El -
R. D. V. KnlcRB, e r>*er. b HnoOes 31
M. J. Prorttr. a -engineer. • b Lever -63-
■J}. Sfieohrrd. ftw. t> SlnuaBOf • ..._. S
M." Bnwi, not oaf 89
•A- S. Brown, a. Entlnwr, B SuUna ' 6
H. innnaa. not- out ' O
Extra* <t> 2. ] B14.Wl.ab 1 ) 18
1 Total (6 wUnO 229
Fan of wlcfteta: 1-5T.- 2-87, 5-1.13,
•iso, s-eoi. 6-210.
r 9tratUe-
12-3-39-0;
12-3-25-2:
BooUn: Lorn- 13-1-40-];
worHi 7C-3-3G-0; Wood 1
Hnoiiei 11-0-68-t; simaoona
Salifvxn I -0-6-1. -
DM not bat: J. B. MotUmore, IB. J.
Mejer. J. -U*v<fy. . -.
LAJVCASfflRE ’
D. Lkn'd. -tbw, b Brown 31
B. Wood, run our .... 60
H. PiKiM. b Brem SM
C. H. L Joyd. b Moretmooe 34
Sullivan, b Dtvrf 10
M. E d|l— t . bit. vAL. b
Mnrttino w 3
D. Bond, oat out 16
J. -SMunm. b MorSmore 25
D. P. HuBbw. oat out 26
-■ Extra* <b 1. Jb 13. nb 1) . .. ,16
56-5 over*. 'Total C7 wfcta.)' ;..250
f'F.‘
«-J 5
Fan a( wlekcta; 1-61. 2-105. 3-136,
6. 3-160. 6-163, 7-203.
Bowfin: P ro cte i 10-5-3-36 0;
1 1-1-32-1. Knfstic 12-2-42-0; Mo
II -0-81-3; Bwwn 13 o-3$-Z- ■
Did not bat: P. LrKt. X. SDufiOe-
I'mplra*; H. Bin] * 'A. Jtgwoa.
Procter . . . magic! in his bat.
Colts Cricket
ENGLISH BOYS
GO FLAT OUT
Four hours’ batting for 1?I
runs was not exhilarating
cricket . That was jhe first
innings contribution of "the
Canadian Golts in the tworday
match on Lloyds Bank ground
at Beckenham against 'the
English Schools XT yesterday. '
The Canadians chose to bat bn
a damp'wickeC~tb.it“WiCS-'no- real
hindrance to them, although- -the
off-spinner. Miller, got some lift
Only ” the 'middle-order batsmen
really put bat to ball. There was
too much satisfaction with singles
which should have been doubles.
The most promising partnership
was by Tran Quada and Mahabir,
who put . on 64 for . the fifth
wicket.
The English schools were left
lid minutes to bat. If -life was
to be put into, the game runs
had to come, quickly — and they
did.
After a slow start of 36 -ran*
in 50 minutes. Sidebottom and
Butcher went Bat out, and In an
hour added 113 in an unbroken
E artnership. In his 88, Side-
ottom Look. 21 runs off Vassall
in ode over.
CANADIAN- COX.TS—- FTrat Inning* >
P. PKaoi. b MlhTHT 1
R. Wnn*. c CKnlos. b Slow* ... 6
D- VakiII. c Skfcbrittom. b Booth 9
P. WaFxmu c Slovold. b Batcher 4
>4. Tranqiuds, c Dutchar. b MJUer
C. M.ihnblr, c Vfftmvr. b Mfllwp
R. Hanvn. c SMfbnmjm, b Miller
P. Robins, b Booth
T. Lrat. i- Mflmrr. h MBlff
R. F<-nn. r * b Booth
B. Snowtlra. not nut
33
31
23
S5
7
35
im„n, nil. ,,u, .4
Extras lb 6. lb 2. ab 10 >~ 18
Total ' 181
F*D at ticket: 1-7. 2-17. 3-25. 4-25..
5-89. 6-111. 7-125. 8-151. 9-161,.
Baullmir Booth 14-1-4-31-3. MBmcr
1.V4-19-1. Burchar 6-4-10-1. Sr even*
8rl-32-l. BacVbovse 9-2-29-0. MlUar
19-7-42.4.
ENG1.1SH SCHOOLS— nw Inafarae
C. aintnn fCbHIrharat * Sidcaoi. -
Stiinvrtm. S _PtMnl *0
A- -4|H» bot to m iBroMwiT RaraWeD.
no* ont M
A. B»itrher iHralh Clark), not. out ... 50
Extras tw H 1
Total ll Htt| 149
Tall or nlrlnt: 1-36-
To bar: A.- Pior (BllbtroniH. A.
srivold CFtlton*. BMfcbooxe tNorth-
rlJrrtonl. P. Booth IWhltdiffe Mnnoli.
S. A. Milner lAlMnclumt. C. Miner
tCtt*’* :r rflriii i. A. Strrrn* lAbto CroMi,
N. D- Ovik (Norwich).'
TODAY'S CRICKET..
. GILLETTE Clip— «rml. Final- -
Cnotorbary , 11-7.30). >Keot V Warwick,
•torn.
OTHER MATCHES-,— Lakruhnm. Nor-
ton, 1 1 1 .50-4.301- Mloor Count Ira v
lldla. NoOhMbnm ' t John Ploj rr CM.I
,11.30-6.301: Thfc North v Thr-Soiilb:
2nd XI COMP Brotbwnrih : Gmi i
naiwicU Roebnnataa iBk. or EqlaBA:
p,irrr>-« SnrttiaiH. Irm; M W Tim |ti . Lrtcs
v Derby*.. SfWimrt: Glaoinrgan X Wore*.
MINOR COOTIES. -- l4iten . tWar-
down rh.i; MiH> t Cnmbx. IJandn:
Llnr* v Ynrfcj. Jeawad: rfortbumber*
lm-i t Late, thlord iVerrb Matvni;
OilsnMi:'P V Doixet. Both: Srfimet »
WtlM. Ipwfrfi: ftnffnlh v Sticks,
HAWLEY LISTED
Brentford have put Alan
Hawley, full-back, on the transfer
fist at his own requesL
a copula r wickrtkcrorr
There were three distinct phases
in the ’ Gloucestershire- innings.
■They were given an ideal. start by
Green and Nicholls who resisted
the temptation to try to so too
fast too soon, and added 57 in 22
overs.- -
Then, came a period of relative
stagnation, before * lunch when'
Gloucestershire were 8o for one
from S3 overs. In the afternoon
Procter, with strokes of astonish-
ing power and beauty, that per-
haps only three or fonr other
batsmen in- the world could have
matched, brought Gloucestershire
back into the game.
He began- quietly- while Knight
played some fine strokes. Then
a leg hit and an. exceUeot..cover-
drive off siuressiveJ. halls from
Hughes set Procter in motion. In
the 47th ■ over, when he was 20,
he drove at Simmons and was
dropped by Wood at slip.
This ; encouraged him ta swing
Simmons for ' a glorious six over
mid-wicket Knight departed to
a legside heave, but Procter,
undeterred drove,- cut aod pulled
as if there was magic in his hat
Dropped again
At 60. he was dropped again by
the unlucky Wood at short fineieg
off ShntUeworth. In the next over,
however, after seeing the 200 up
he hooked at Lever : and. was out a
briJliairt diving left-handed catch
by Engineer.
. In.tfce morning Nichdlls's strokes
were elegantly fashioned ■ and
■played with time to- spared while
Green was quieter than usual
before a typically remarkable
pick-up and throw by Clive Lloyd
at short mid-widget ran him .out
TT ,°T HrER Match
^Unftcd Lootfoai Bankj. 199-9 dec.. Mel
SCHOOLS CRICKET'
“SKI TRffrrVAI. njrrr-
°or ^SESi %.$:
BI n dFei _J®- Sira two a fil
Mooory 50). MldJalLftfi mb
fR. BoHrc &S2, Si NTctKiUofl 4-3R),
Soeedtvav
COLE RULED OUT
Howard Cole, the leading King’s
Lynn rider, will be out .of action
for a month because of a kidney
complaint. He will miss stand-by
duty as a reserve for the Nordic-
British final of the world cham-
pionships at* Glasgow tomorrow.
NO PLAY YESTERDAY
At Lokfobam. Mtaar Coiotki X IMb.
2nd XI COMPETITION
At RnrhunKon. " Surrey 130 (D.
BrvakwvU 5-58). Nortbaats 31-1.
At GlaaCMtar. . ClM 145 tLcwtaattra
6-35) * 9-0. Warwick* 10L tSUMklrtmt
:a>.
Swi^s Ogenc GffH Gbampionsliip
er
Cldrh
on 65 , but
steeds the show
By MO^L WILLIAJVIS in Crans-Snr-Sierre
OUGH CliveClaric hdd' the lead -at the end of
the first ropnd of the Swiss Open" Championship
at Crans-Sur-Sierre yesterday with a 65, the limelight
ftoien ’ by ' Jjuiy
tyas
Casper, the former United
- States Open champion and
favourite. 1
After eight holes he was an
unhappy five over par - - and
rapidly falling out of conten-
tion. But he got a: birdie at
-the ninth to be oht in 40 and
then came home in a startling
30 for a round . of , 70, ; one '
. under pari
.-The high spot of this dramatic
revival -came at the ■ 580-yard
14th, into the wind, where he
lidled his three-iron second 'for
albatross two. Later, he esti-
mated the; stroke to have been
from at least 225 yards, which
meant he Jut his drive- 355
yards. • • -
ip Doles in o4. six under par, aim hsi.m Min i\*n iraiw.nu^ t. Com
on a. predictably low-scoring day -iu:so. :
he k. well in the bunt 73 JfSSM. M SSS!SS ‘?8L»S e T
One • stKike^bebind Oark is wt
Manpel Ballesteros, of Spam. Mum- <n. z?aiand>. v. Howntrr
while Stuart and Eric Brown and
-Lionel Platts- are among those on
67.:.- . . ' . .
. :^ff breeze
. The . course was not playing
quite’ as easily as it- had in prac-
tice, for a stiff, southerly breeze
blew . through, the Rhone 'Valley
Leading scores
65--— C. On* tG.H.).
6T — T. Bril* iS. Alrtcoj. S.
E. Brown iCJ.X L. Platt"
63— L. GrapNOtml IllaJ?'. F* .MfS?
Spain): J- Gnaw iCJ-i. J. Hjan
iiVs.i. M. Pinero fSMla). D. HulcJUn-
«on trf Africa). B. Drii« Ton 1 * Otalyt.
69 P. Botin- iG.ff.). M. MomM Lfpypt).
. C. De/oy IG.B.J, K- Sola iSpnJOi. J.
OalUrdo tSnaiB). Jk. JD" 11 *"
B, Dt«u lllily). D. Vavgnu tu.B.1,
- ; A. Suttoo - (U^.L
TO— P. Oneterraana t&wlttcrtand). V.
. TteUuMl«^T9eoUn»>.«2*V DB o' , S5I2J?
(Ah .A ,R. BnmandtaJ fUSn, P- Town-
Fmirit >6. Africa). P. llottrt iG.B.i.
• G. CiwtWMtem IG.B.J. R. SSK" 0 ®! 1
(ItklM. T. CbiKM tS. AfriWl. T.
HarOn- rW. Gfimsiirt, H. Bojle 'G.n.l.
. ■ V. Baraw tapsln): M. Gtw** ‘G.B.i.
* M. Ben, bridge tCi.). D- RJdlq' iG.B.i.-
Lo 'Uuw BM*' iTaMwao).
.n — B. u upset 1G.S.X H. Baonenan.
' (Gjf.1. B. Bfimo, iG.B.i. C. fijj#
(G.B.I, A. VrailfT Utalll. O. Mills
. iG.B.i, £, Cuite»««. tll4l>«. D. Butlrr
(G.B.i. V. ftaUr iS. Africa). P. Molina
(Arnrutioni.
-P, UapJIno fG.B.J. J. Caatracra
Spain). G. Hunt (G.H.i. O. .ncra
IG.B.I. E. DnWHM iW'-Hi n), S. Loi-a-
t«-UI < Ual»i. D. Main* iSwnx.V
fs» ftTcrle run. O. ' tfaflMMOTor iAiw
( rlnj. W. Un( IG.B.I. G. Murall «Au<-
(railn). 5 •
74 — W. Mb tray ■ (G.B.I, J. Fnwlrr S.
Africa). JU Moon iSwllz.1 G. noMnw
■'Mime i . Australia). T, Small iU^.i.
V. Mood IG.B.I. P. Cewcn (G.B.I. D.
HnKh (G.D.).
75 — G. Finrfa'l .1 IHii*. A. BmoIa rG.B.I.
G. Drlrlun lllaly), E. Polland 1C.R.1,
A. A narllM (Italy). ». Cdnonlra lltalvi.
M. M notes aSpnlnlr f. Lopra. (Sonin).
R. Tingles iSwItt.). Suyrd CJicnl
. _ . _ (Loypi).
iii the ' aftcriioon and . Che sur- 76 — ^kt~BuHctb ittit.). Tr _ Whsiib''iu.s.).
rounding mountain ' peaks were
-bunding
ibsoired
obscured by intermittent doud.
.‘'□ark : .got ’, his .. 66 iu early.
Though , bis. golf this year bas
lacked consistency, be. bas felt in
recent weeks that, things were
beginning to fall into place. So
it- proved. ,- t . .
He began with two birdies and
then went 3. 2, -4 at the seventh/
eighth and ninth tb be out in 5).
A four at the 14th and ■ a three
at the 18th put him seven under
par, ■ bat he then' - played his one
poor stroke 'of the-roun’d, a heavy
pitch to -the I7th’ green which
led to • three piitts.
Stuart Brown, one of the- more
promising young- British profes-
sionals. -fiaa arather' more difficult
conditions to contend with. -though
wind at -this altitude docs not'have
the same effect as at sea level.
At. the third, 180, ya^ds. against'
the breeze, for instance, be .was
still hitting only a seven, iron. ,
Missed eagles
A broken 'bone ’in the ^little
finger .of .bis Tight' band has prob-
abkr held him back 1 this year, but
jt did hot trouble him* yesterday
and his approach play, particu-
larly on the first nine, was of the
highest Glass. 1
• He almost holed his little pitch
Women’s International Golf
BRITISH ISLES OUT TO
AVENGE TRIPLE DEFEAT
By ENID WJLSON
HHHE biennial match, for the Vagliano Cup between the
British Isles and Europie is being played at
Worplesdon today and tomorrow. With five foursomes
and 10 singles each day.
The British Isles are seek-
ing to regain the cup, which .
has been won by Europe ' '
in the last three contests. .
Originally thiamatch consisted
oF a one-day fixture between .
Britain and - France, ; dating'back
to 1931, It was last held at '
VVorplesdon in 3935.
"At the' request of the tadiits’
Golf Union, the - grope of the
matdi was extended, to include the
Continent of Europe, and it was ,
modified tb its present form in .
1959. .
The donor of them p, -M. Andre -
Vagliano, - died a few weeks’ ago
and' sympathies are extended to
his two illustrions daughters. Mme . .. . _. .... .,
Laliy-Sega r d-and Mmc- Sonia Eloy. Ka4:nryri Phili+pS^- -the-
S" the hl match i?tin . g “ ished -.***?* - Yorkshire •• . left-hander.
The majority* of players Iq.both .._whpj§ a_iate.. Cb.ange^jpr.
at the first tar a tbree and then
at the' fourth, sixth, and seventh
almost picked up three eagles.
-His- four-iron second to the 500-
yard fourth stopped six inches
away,' he -wedged to within two
' inches for : a three -at the sixth
and- to within nine inches for
another three at the" seventh.
Three putts at the short eighth
checked his progress.- but be was
out in 34. two under par, and in
the back nine never looked as if
he wqutd let. a 'good round slip.
But . the putts would . not drop
and he collected onlv hvo. birdies.
At the tenth ha was not too happy
With his pitch into the wind, bnt
sank a' long putt for a three and
then seni-ed a really great four
at the 580-yard 14th.
He drove into the -left rough
and a Christmas tree obscured nis
route to- the distant green. He.
nevertheless reached for his four
wood and faded an enormous shot
to within a foot of the front of
the green, chipped. up- and tapped
home the putt.
David Vaughan, recent winner
of the Under' 23 tournament at
■Rnval , l.vtham,. also looked very
.solid and had a 69. The 17th cost
him a five, but his frustration
came at' the ninth where a
photographer bothered him. on
the. tee. As a result 'he pulled
his drive under a small tree and
it cost him a six. .
Soitib“East Golf .
OFF FOR =
MOODY
■ By DEREK WILD
•riHRIS MOODY, 17, a
^ four handicap player
who learned bns golf candy-
ing at the Thorpe Hall club,
of Walker Clip captain
Mike Bonallack, won the
South-East junior cham-
pionship at Sunningdale
yesterday.
Moody, who has just com
Dieted his A-levels. received ?
putting tip from Arthur Lees
the Sunningdalc professional
and a few backswinfi hints fron
Sam Torrance, Lees’ assistant
then went out ta . cnmplPU
rounds of 75 and <1.
His 146 total was* nnc bettai
than that of Kents Barry Collin
t76. 711,, and twn up un Surrey. 4
Midair Kerr 176, 72). *
Moody who. not expecting , to
win, had to borrow a tie brlorc
collecting his trophy from nonal-
lack, his lonff-standmc idnl, mme
to 'Crawley in September, which
should be Rood news for Sussex-
After dropping two strokes or
the new course's short necnnd 10
the morning and taking his onlv
six of the day at the loth, he
completed his round with a birdie
four tar a 75.
Out In S3
But he was out in 55 on ihc
old' course in the afternoon play-
ing the best golF of his young
life. He had a birdie three
the second and an eagle two a I
the ninth, where he drove Jr
within two feet of the Pio.
ya jTe dropped strokes at the ldth
12th. 15th and 18th. where hr
three-putted, but picked up s
birdie at the 11th to be hack ir
38 for a -fine one over par 1 1.
But Moodv was unable to steei
Essex to the team title, which
went this vear to Surrey.
.-146 C. Moody ' F—I-X17 5. ,1 VJ,
B. Colli no (-Ki-fiT) 76. 71. 14*-— A
Krny (Sum-vi 76. T'J. 149-HS. Bart
iSiim-tl 73. 76. 150 — D. N«kf)»l'
. surra, -i 76. 74. 151— n. nnh^n
V-Tl 73. 73: C. Barara >Kmli iS. 7'
jtl. Bh truer <HnnW 75 76: S. (.ta'l r :
rv-wv) 78. 73. 1SS—M. >»Iimw iSiiiwfv
78. 7*. 153 — P. Dckihnin tSiirrrvi 86
RU'-Lli * OvnuJ 7*. 79. . ... „
Trwn. — Kami iKhit. XMiiXovIII* B,n
& Doiiilitnni 4 4hnli. ] : Cs-rx A iMro.lv.
B. PomwaiH-o. N. flnrch Crnwiryi I4n
2 A«f GrOap nlnnrnH 14: Warn.
154ta-:t3: Craw I**. 151: 16: Sh*w.
752: 17: Barr. 149.
HAMMOND OFF MARK
John Hammond (BerkhamsLedi
21, a Former youth international
who turned professional in Feb
ruarv, gained his first succes*
when he won the Coventry cluh *
open assistant tonrnament with i
36-hole aggregate nf WO yrsterdav
140— J. Hnmnioml «HerkllaR>M*-dt o').
■ 1 i4i— p, IJ. Hilton |9l Plrrii 1
7 n : 71 144 M. Wrlilnn i BI<iX>\ !• ll
74 70- P, Mill™ iR.in'-)»4<l Itaww .4
70 i45 — m. . 1. niMdMrauah iCovfn
Irv) 71 74: $■ Lrarrmore W,m>
74 71: n. I. WIMa (Ruwl.iiarn >fl
75 146 — X. I.. Roridi tFnlfnni H*h
71. 75; T. Prirr iGtPrpfnrd G.C.i • 4
7-2. 147 — R. Camrnm iMutImI 74
;v I. H. Doran i Whltlulqlnit) 73. 74
14*— n. J. Walkar tAddta'ilon PIjv
79. 69.
POLO
cowon *V P\RK CH4I.I.EWF. C«.'
1«t nri: C»rr'*i»*iill F.inm lrr.-d '7’ 5
winrianr Pnr) 5: «l,nv# , ll P^rk h |rr
Li'tM irrcd Pal S’j. HOI.DEN WHr
CUP. Oir-ffnot: Ltw Irfu-w itp! "r 1 ft
K.rttaTl.in rW .V HARRISON Clf. Ol
final: OakbronL 8. PfO\er PnrJi Ire
3’a) 7«a.
Atlantic weather map
.’La
teams at e familiar with Worples-
don, and as a venue it Favouhs
the visitors, for most of them are
accustomed to tree-lined /airways.
Two newcomers
• Only two of the continental
team, • Christine Nordstrom
(Sweden! and Emma Garcia Ogara
(Spain) are newcomers. They are
not at full strength .because of
the absence' of Catherine Lacoste
' de Prado, whd has recently be-
come the mother of a, daughter.
The British Isles side contains,
four newcomers. Michelle Walker,
recent winner dr the British title,
Audrey Briggs, the Welsh cham-
pion, a fid Beverly Hake, and Lindy
Demsoo-Pender, who were respec-
tively finalist dnd bronze medallist-
in the. British.
Gillian Hntton, the Scottish
- international was a late withdrawal
the. British Jsles. .
Because of gastroenteritis and is
replaced by the Yorkshire leftr.
bander: - Kathryn Phillips.
The course measures 6,189 yards
— an extension " of 551 yards
beyond the normal. Ladies' Golf
Union -markers — and the special
par is 74.- Today’s foursomes
order is: ... •
Mta ». W4Dcer fFaveribam) A M fa*
M. ,E»«ird ..IBnItanuWri') * Mb* L.
FoneH (Swrdra> & Miia J. tfe Witt Pan
fHolUixO. "MM I. Robert*™ 'DunaVOrWI
« MM O. 0*1*7 fWrat B^Tml v -Mra
J- GurMtUc i France) A Mb* M. Fcitnni
.ICcmumi. Ulw A. Irrin iR. Mhun ft
St An DCs) ft MM* B. Hide* iCotmvnM
Hflhl * MM* B. Varannat CFranral ft
Mr* f. GoMdrfimJif flbilvi. MMa M.
McKenna UtooabaR) .* .Mr* L- Brian*
■(R. -LMrpimn » Mtar C. Rrybnrtk (Bel-
oltrnil & Ml a* A. Jaimnt (Holland).
MM* E. BniMunf iClontarT) & M
Den Mon- Pender f Prince "si
Macke*on-S«abach
p b gr h ^HotUtndJ
Mn
World Yoatb. Rowing Championship
ABINGDON PAIR IN SEMI-FINAL
By DEIS MONO HILL in Bled, Yugoslavia .
XYTTH a team that looks even stronger than last year’s,
all- bnt one of .the East German crews strolled into
the semi-finals on the opening day of the World Youth
Championships yesterday
at Bled. So far the British
contingent’s : score is jiist
one -
This was the reriilt of a splen-
did row by the Abingdon coxed
pair, who refused to be shaken
by a flying start by Norway, who
were a length ahead after .500
metres, only to blow op at the
1,000 metre mark.
This left the Russia ns ahead,
but a storming finish kept the
British pair within a length of
them and -eight seconds ahead* of
Norway, with France and' Austria
trailing. Two boys- from Ridley.
Canada, and inevitably East Ger-
many, were the other ’ heat
win n era. -
All 'the other British, entries
face repechages today, needing
only a third place to progress,
except for Prentice, who must be
second. By the end of the' 'day
the picture should be rosier.
The Wallingford coxless pair did
best oF the others, recovering
from a slow start, which left them
fifth at 1.000 metres, to forge past
Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia
find make .up five seconds of
France's- six-second lead. Russia. 1
however, were soon out bn their
own. v
' Prentice overhauled
Prentice was in third Diace
Al
_ was ■ In third
behind East- German and
scullers untfl the last three strokes
when the Bulgarian overhauled
.him. He now meets a West Ger-
man, who looks sure to' beat him
but, os time, should qu alif y at-
the ; expense of. Austria and
America.
-Both the. fours disappointed.
Hampton were ' going . well In
second place behind East Germany
when a launch wash cost . them
three places in as many strokes
a ad they recovered only one.
There >vas. only two seconds dif-
ference between the second and
fifth boats. ( .
Eton, needing. only to be third,
looked- 'safe enough after 500
metres, but Norway went past at
half-way and any _ hope of re-
covery vanished with two crabs
in the last 10 strokes. They were.
however, faster than all there
repechage opponents.
The British 'eight failed, to get
their usual fast start and were
Soon struggling. ■ "West- Germany.
Jugoslavia and France drew away
and they held off the Swiss chal-
lenge by fess than half a second.
COXfiD FOtiRS^— Hc*t 1; E- G*r-
' Sri 4 ■ 7a; Frtnw
toto; 5-02-81. Poland S^I 4V7 8 f~ Franc*
G,B - S-I6-25, •. Gftfc?
5-16-SI. Anrni 5-31 -81. Hut it;
BHKurta 4-S7-77. ' . Hut 3‘.C*aa4m
.5-03-52. . •
COXLBSS FAfflS, — Heat 1 : E- Gw-
maoy 5-S2-6I. Heat 2: VSSR 5-30'W,
France 5-35 - 95.- G.B. 5*6 — "
5-3T-0SU r • -
Norway 5-90 -64.
Sff^GLE SCULLS— Heat 1 : W. Ger-
5-42 -92, Ucit l : E. Geminiy
roiood: -5*51 -87. ' Bulgaria
_ C.B ._ Mfi- id; ' dmda
Vosortaw* 5-4«™6.
'&w*MloraKIn°^-*l^
- Heat S: Italy 5-43-62.
543-92.
5- 56-45;
6- 04-45.
B«M.4 S Halted 5-35-89.
COXED PAIRS ll*t 3 .
7 : JUA.S.R. S43-3S cm-. S-iTrsB;
Nnraray . 5-55.-38. rraoct ft- 03 - 78
*WH1» 6-22-28. BhTI! Ciii£
t-if-ls" 3 : ,*■ Gcmusjr
CtJXLCSS FOURS _ OMU(«.ra- :
Hoot 2:
But T • ' Balmila 4-4i
f£fcf*i-s,i?Si ea S ' W 23 - H “* 3:
MOTie KMIS^BRt 1: Jte-
majJ 3-06-56 Heat 2: U.3A.R.
5-07 -Off"- - 3 ■ W. G-*r*ianj
' ' ' EIGH-ra^-Hr*t 1 : 03, " 4-29 ^31.
Hut E. C*nnw 4-35 ■ 6&. But 3:
w. Grrmany 4-51 '43. YaimlavM
tszuvsL&r "- CJL + - 4 °- 85 ’
Low “ W ” will continue to move north-east and
while Low “ D ” moves slourly east. High “ 5 ”
move north-eastwards while High ** X ” mores .
■- ■' High ** E ** will also move east.
BRITISH ISLES
' ' Issued at 6.30 pan.
Black circles show temperatures
expected in • Fahrenheit. The
equivalent temperature in Centi-
grade is given alongside in
brackets. Arrows indicate wind
direction ' and speed in m.j
Pressures in millibars and u
WORLD CONDI"
S 84 29
c 66 19
fi 90 32
S 82 28
c 62 28
c 68 19
S 86 30
s 91 33
c 66 19
. Algiers
Am st dm
Athens
Barcelna
Beirut
Belfast
Belgrade
Berlin
Biarritz
-Birmghm s 70 21
Bristol s 70 21
Brussels c 84 18
Budapest s 86 30
Cardiff - s 68 20
Cologne r 68 20
Copnhen c‘ 64 18
Dublin c 64 18
'Edinbrgh s 61 16
Faro s 86 30
Flo re rice f SO 32
Funchal c 70 21
Geneva f 77 2 5
Gibraltar f TS 24
Glasgow c 64 18
Guernsey a 64 18
Helsinki C 75 24
Lo.fclan _c 57 II
Inoibrck * 81 27
Istanbul . C 81 27
Jersey s 70 21
L. Palm.
Lisbon
Locarno
London
Luxmbrg
Madrid
Majorca
Malaga
Malta
Manchstr I
Montreal s
Moscow s
Munich f
Naples s
N. York «
Nice s
Nicosia *
Oslo
Paris
Prague
Reykjvk
Rome
Stockhlm
Tel A\iv
Tunis
Valencia
Venice
Vienna
Warsaw
Zurich
c 6
s 72
s S6
r 54
c 70 .
r 82 2
s 81
f 82 L
* 5
c 8ft If
s as 3n
f 70 21
C— Cloud)-: «— (Sunny; f~rair; r-
rain. Temperatures iF & Cl lunch
time generally.
LONDON READINGS
Min temp: 7 p.m. to 7 ajn. 59 F
050: Max temp: 7 ajn. to 7 p.m.
71F (220; Rainfall 0*50 in. Sun,
'shine 2-6 hours.
In Britain yesterday (daytime):
Warmest, Per shore, T7F 1250:
Coldest, Wick 57F (140; Wettest,
Goriest on. 3-3ftin. Snoniest, Isles
of SdUy; 15*4 hours.
Iaghtrag-np time 9JS5
.p.m, to 4.50 a.m. Sun
5 -19 a-ffk. sets
ESft pjn. Moon rises
I.W p.nu. sets . 10J51
' w * ter ntz London
lWdge 6.47 juu. |£lft); 6,53 D.m.
(20.7ft). Dover 3J>6 ajrt f IS-SFtD :
4.10 pjn. (19ift).
■ LAWN TENNIS
DtJTCH ^OPE.V iHI'v-raum] Men-*
Stele*. 3nl Rd: C. Bottridc (CBl bt
J. PlDtD . Bravo iCUHr). 6-1., 44. 6-4.
' pDffiSC- Orel.— Mm's Stem. 1*1
R4: S. G. 4 Austral id) bl R.
KaSL'SteSSffiVb. 6 *.
WEATHER FROM
THE RESORTS
Report* tor the 34 hours io 6
yesterday.
Srartwro
BrMlinoion
Gorlralcjn
Lowes: ott
Clnrlon
Southend 0-2
Hern* Bay 0.6
O.T
0-2
MVftile
0.1
South
Folknmm
Hoslinw
F-4*tbnuma
Brighton
tvirthirra
Bon B«r R
•Mniuuea
Shan VI In
RnnrnemHi
Bwuagr
iVnmoiith 1 1 .6
Exmoulb R.o
Telgnraih - '
Tnniunv
Phlnim
0.1
1.0
O 6
1.8
u
0 5
S.f
8.4
3.30
1.79
0.7.3
0.35
0.51
0.65
3.13
0.35
O.I9
0.18
0.13
0 0ft
n.io
0-01
M.ii.
letno.
F C
bi in
ft 2 17
61 16
60 16
63 17
67 13
66 19
65 IS
66 19
67 19
65 13
65 18
67 19
*9 2^
69 3T
7 1 nrt
7i 55
O.oa 7i 55
u*
il.2
13.1
0.05
0.99
Jrrwv
Guernsey
Wert
Oftnila, ‘ ....
MortUmbe 8.7
hleckpool 7.n
StniMiport 11.3
Analrw 1 .a
nfracamhe 1 1 .9
Nrwrruay m.i
tell* la. 13.4
Srndnnri
Lerwlrk
Wiek
S'Ornnwu
Abnrdeen
Lcucban
if 23
IS
75 "4
69 21
7 1
69 5T
8.8
T.T
o.ni
— *5 m
71 22
— SB 20
ft9 21
63 17
67 19
ft. m
68 30
^ 12
57 |.i
ftft n
ii 14
63 17
Wrer
nn-s|.
Dr>
Thun,.'
Tnuiui
utin
Cloud'.
CUunl-
R.nn
1 bund-
TOiin.l*
R -in
Rjin
Shn*v*
Win iv *r
Sunni
Simnv
Sunnv
*unnv
Simnv
ftiinn,
Pun-iv
Sunn,-
I'lnv
Sunny
Sunnv
«un-ie
?‘imv
i'tanv
Frv,
'"nnv
ftiln...
ft'inni
“innr
£"nn-.
Sunnv
ra-HI-er
f.-
r ,j: ~ :